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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #69692 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/69692)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Frederick Douglass, by Booker T.
-Washington
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Frederick Douglass
-
-Author: Booker T. Washington
-
-Release Date: January 3, 2023 [eBook #69692]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Richard Tonsing and the Online Distributed Proofreading
- Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from
- images generously made available by The Internet Archive)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FREDERICK DOUGLASS ***
-
-
-
-
-
- AMERICAN CRISIS BIOGRAPHIES
-
- Edited by
- Ellis Paxson Oberholtzer, Ph. D.
-
-
-
-
- “=”The American Crisis Biographies“=”
-
-
-Edited by Ellis Paxson Oberholtzer, Ph.D. With the counsel and advice of
-Professor John B. McMaster, of the University of Pennsylvania.
-
-Each 12mo, cloth, with frontispiece portrait. Price $1.25 net; by mail,
-$1.37.
-
- These biographies will constitute a complete and comprehensive history
- of the great American sectional struggle in the form of readable and
- authoritative biography. The editor has enlisted the co-operation of
- many competent writers, as will be noted from the list given below. An
- interesting feature of the undertaking is that the series is to be
- impartial, Southern writers having been assigned to Southern subjects
- and Northern writers to Northern subjects, but all will belong to the
- younger generation of writers, thus assuring freedom from any
- suspicion of wartime prejudice. The Civil War will not be treated as a
- rebellion, but as the great event in the history of our nation, which,
- after forty years, it is now clearly recognized to have been.
-
- Now ready:
-
- =Abraham Lincoln.= By ELLIS PAXSON OBERHOLTZER.
-
- =Thomas H. Benton.= By JOSEPH M. ROGERS.
-
- =David G. Farragut.= By JOHN R. SPEARS.
-
- =William T. Sherman.= By EDWARD ROBINS.
-
- =Frederick Douglass.= By BOOKER T. WASHINGTON.
-
- =Judah P. Benjamin.= By PIERCE BUTLER.
-
- =Robert E. Lee.= By PHILIP ALEXANDER BRUCE.
-
- =Jefferson Davis.= By PROF. W. E. DODD.
-
- =Alexander H. Stephens.= By LOUIS PENDLETON.
-
- =John C. Calhoun.= By GAILLARD HUNT.
-
- In preparation:
-
- =Daniel Webster.= By PROF. C. H. VAN TYNE.
-
- =John Quincy Adams.= By BROOKS ADAMS.
-
- =John Brown.= By W. E. BURGHARDT DUBOIS.
-
- =William Lloyd Garrison.= By LINDSAY SWIFT.
-
- =Charles Sumner.= By PROF. GEORGE H. HAYNES.
-
- =William H. Seward.= By EDWARD EVERETT HALE, Jr.
-
- =Stephen A. Douglas.= By PROF. HENRY PARKER WILLIS.
-
- =Thaddeus Stevens.= By PROF. J. A. WOODBURN.
-
- =Andrew Johnson.= By PROF. WALTER L. FLEMING.
-
- =Henry Clay.= By THOMAS H. CLAY.
-
- =Ulysses S. Grant.= By PROF. FRANKLIN S. EDMONDS.
-
- =Edwin M. Stanton.= By EDWIN S. CORWIN.
-
- =“Stonewall” Jackson.= By HENRY ALEXANDER WHITE.
-
- =Jay Cooke.= By ELLIS PAXSON OBERHOLTZER.
-
-[Illustration: Frederick Douglass]
-
- AMERICAN CRISIS BIOGRAPHIES
-
-
-
-
- FREDERICK DOUGLASS
-
- by
-
- BOOKER T. WASHINGTON
-
- Author of “Up from Slavery,” “Working with the Hands,” etc.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- PHILADELPHIA
- GEORGE W. JACOBS & COMPANY
- PUBLISHERS
-
-
-
-
- Copyright, 1906, by
- GEORGE W. JACOBS & COMPANY
- _Published, February, 1907_
-
-
-
-
- PREFACE
-
-
-The chance or destiny which brought to this land of ours, and placed in
-the midst of the most progressive and the most enlightened race that
-Christian civilization has produced, some three or four millions of
-primitive black people from Africa and their descendants, has created
-one of the most interesting and difficult social problems which any
-modern people has had to face. The effort to solve this problem has put
-to a crucial test the fundamental principles of our political life and
-the most widely accepted tenets of our Christian faith. Frederick
-Douglass’s career falls almost wholly within the first period of the
-struggle in which this problem has involved the people of this
-country,—the period of revolution and liberation. That period is now
-closed. We are at present in the period of construction and
-readjustment. Many of the animosities engendered by the conflicts and
-controversies of half a century ago still survive to confuse the
-councils of those who are seeking to live in the present and the future,
-rather than in the past. But changes are rapidly coming about that will
-remove, or at least greatly modify, these lingering animosities. This
-book will have failed of its purpose just so far as anything here said
-shall serve to revive or keep alive the bitterness of those
-controversies of which it gives the history; it will have attained its
-purpose just so far as it aids its readers to comprehend the motives of,
-and the men who entered with such passionate earnestness into, the
-struggle of which it gives in part a picture—particularly the one man,
-the story of whose life is here narrated.
-
-In the succeeding chapters, an effort has been made to present an
-account of the life of Frederick Douglass as a slave and as a public man
-during the most eventful years of the anti-slavery movement, the Civil
-War, the period of reconstruction, and the after years of comparative
-freedom from sectional agitation over the “Negro problem.”
-
-To bring this study within the plan and purposes of the American Crisis
-Series of Biographies, such subjects as “The Genesis of the Anti-Slavery
-Agitation,” “The Fugitive Slave Law,” “The Underground Railway,” “The
-American Colonization Society,” “The Conflict in Kansas for Free Soil,”
-“The John Brown Raid,” “The Civil War,” “The Enlistment of Colored
-Troops,” and “Reconstruction,” have been given more space than they have
-received in earlier biographies.
-
-While it is true that Frederick Douglass would have been a notable
-character in any period, it is also true that in the life of hardly any
-other man was there comprehended so great a variety of incidents of what
-is perhaps the most memorable epoch in our history. The mere personal
-side of Douglass’s life, though romantic and interesting, is here
-treated only in outline.
-
-S. Laing Williams, of Chicago, Ill., and his wife, Fannie Barrier
-Williams, have been of incalculable service in the preparation of this
-volume. Mr. Williams enjoyed a long and intimate acquaintance with Mr.
-Douglass, and I have been privileged to draw heavily upon his fund of
-information. He and Mrs. Williams have reviewed this manuscript since
-its preparation and have given it their cordial approval.
-
-In addition to these sources of information, I wish to make grateful
-acknowledgment of my indebtedness to Major Charles R. Douglass for the
-use of many printed addresses, and for interesting data showing his
-father’s work in the Underground Railway.
-
-I must also acknowledge my sense of gratitude for the opportunity
-afforded in this work of getting close to the heart and life of this
-great leader of my race. No Negro can read and study the life of
-Frederick Douglass without deriving from it courage to look up and
-forward.
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- CHRONOLOGY 11
-
- I. FREDERICK DOUGLASS, THE SLAVE 15
-
- II. BACK TO PLANTATION-LIFE 33
-
- III. ESCAPE FROM SLAVERY; LEARNING THE WAYS OF FREEDOM 54
-
- IV. BEGINNING OF HIS PUBLIC CAREER 69
-
- V. SLAVERY AND ANTI-SLAVERY 83
-
- VI. SEEKS REFUGE IN ENGLAND 99
-
- VII. HOME AGAIN AS A FREEMAN—NEW PROBLEMS AND NEW TRIUMPHS 116
-
- VIII. FREE COLORED PEOPLE AND COLONIZATION 139
-
- IX. THE UNDERGROUND RAILWAY AND THE FUGITIVE SLAVE LAW 157
-
- X. DOUGLASS, HARRIET BEECHER STOWE AND JOHN BROWN 174
-
- XI. FOREBODINGS OF THE CRISIS 195
-
- XII. DOUGLASS’S SERVICES IN THE CIVIL WAR 217
-
- XIII. EARLY PROBLEMS OF FREEDOM 245
-
- XIV. SHARING THE RESPONSIBILITIES AND HONORS OF FREEDOM 273
-
- XV. FURTHER EVIDENCES OF POPULAR ESTEEM, WITH GLIMPSES INTO THE
- PAST 302
-
- XVI. FINAL HONORS TO THE LIVING AND TRIBUTES TO THE DEAD 334
-
- BIBLIOGRAPHY 353
-
- INDEX 355
-
-
-
-
- CHRONOLOGY
-
-
- 1817— February. Born on a plantation at Tuckahoe, near the town of
- Easton, Talbot County, on the eastern shore of Maryland; the
- exact date not known. His mother, Harriet Bailey, was the slave
- of Captain Aaron Anthony, the manager of the estate of Colonel
- Edward Lloyd.
-
- 1825— Sent to Baltimore to live with Hugh Auld, a relative of his
- master.
-
- 1833— Returns to Maryland and becomes the slave of Thomas Auld, at St.
- Michaels, Talbot County; while here he has an encounter with
- the Negro slave-breaker, Covey.
-
- 1836— First attempt to run away results in his being sent back to
- Baltimore where he is apprenticed by Thomas Auld to William
- Gardiner of Fells Point, to learn the trade of ship-calker.
-
- 1838— September 3d. Makes his escape from Baltimore, reaching New York
- the next day. September 15th, according to the marriage
- certificate, possibly a day earlier, he marries a free colored
- woman, Anna Murray, who on receiving the news of his escape
- follows him to New York. They are directed to New Bedford,
- Mass., by Anti-Slavery friends where Douglass begins his life
- as a freeman. He changes his name from Frederick Augustus
- Washington Bailey, to Frederick Douglass.
-
- 1841— August 11th. Makes his first speech before an Anti-Slavery
- convention and becomes a lecturer in the Anti-Slavery cause.
-
- 1842— Participates in the campaign for equal rights in Rhode Island
- during the “Dorr Rebellion.”
-
- 1843— Takes part in the campaign of “A Hundred Anti-Slavery
- Conventions”; his hand broken in a fight with a mob at
- Pendleton, Indiana.
-
- 1845— Writes, in order to prove that he is what he proclaims himself,
- a fugitive slave, _Narrative of Frederick Douglass_, giving
- the names of his owners. This book was published by the
- Anti-Slavery Society. August 16th, sails for Liverpool,
- England, lest the publication of his biography should lead to
- his capture and reënslavement. He is received with enthusiasm
- in England and his freedom is purchased by two members of the
- Society of Friends.
-
- 1846— August 7th. Addresses the “World’s Temperance Convention” at
- Covent Garden Theatre, London. December 5th, the papers are
- signed which grant him his freedom.
-
- 1847— April 20th. Reaches America again. December 3d, the first issue
- of the _North Star_, subsequently _Frederick Douglass’s Paper_,
- is published, he having first removed to Rochester, N. Y.
- Following its establishment came his rupture with Garrison and
- the Abolitionist wing of the Anti-Slavery party.
-
- 1848— September. Delivers an address before a colored convention at
- Cleveland, O., on farming and industrial education.
-
- 1851— Announces his sympathies with the voting Abolitionists.
-
- 1852— Supports the Free Soil party and is elected a delegate from
- Rochester to the Free Soil Convention at Pittsburg, Pa.
-
- 1853— Visits Harriet Beecher Stowe at Andover, Mass., with reference to
- the forming of an industrial school for colored youth.
-
- 1855— _My Bondage and My Freedom_ published in New York and Auburn.
-
- 1856— Supports Frémont, the candidate of the Republican party, for
- President.
-
- 1858— _Douglass’s Monthly_ is established. Its publication is continued
- until 1864.
-
- 1859— August 20th. Visits John Brown at Chambersburg, Pa. This was his
- last interview with the old Anti-Slavery hero before the attack
- on Harper’s Ferry, three weeks later. At this interview John
- Brown made a final effort to induce him to join in the
- dangerous enterprise.
-
- 1859— November 12th. Sails from Quebec on his second visit to England.
- This trip is undertaken because he is in danger of being
- implicated in the plot to cause an uprising of the slaves for
- which John Brown had already been executed.
-
- 1860— Returns to the United States, called home by the death of his
- daughter, Anna.
-
- 1860— December 3d. Attempts to speak in Tremont Temple, Boston, but the
- meeting is broken up.
-
- 1863— Publishes in _Douglass’s Monthly_ his address to colored men
- urging them to enlist in the Federal Army. He is instrumental
- in forming the Fifty-fourth and Fifty-fifth Massachusetts
- Regiments of colored soldiers. Subsequently he visits President
- Lincoln to secure fair treatment of the colored soldiers and is
- promised, by Secretary Stanton, a commission as Assistant
- Adjutant to General Thomas, which, however, he does not
- receive.
-
- 1866— February 7th. Interviews President Johnson to urge upon him the
- wisdom of granting the suffrage to the freedmen. Issues shortly
- afterward an address in reply to President Johnson’s argument
- against granting the suffrage to Negroes. In September, is
- elected a delegate to the “National Loyalists’ Convention” in
- Philadelphia.
-
- 1869— Becomes editor of the _New National Era_ which he continued to
- edit until 1872, at a pecuniary loss of about $10,000.
-
- 1871— Visits San Domingo as Secretary to the Commission, consisting of
- B. F. Wade, Dr. S. G. Howe and Andrew D. White, to determine
- the attitude of that country toward annexation to the United
- States. He is appointed a member of the upper house of the
- territorial legislature of Washington, D. C., but shortly
- resigns his position in favor of his son, Lewis. May 30th, he
- delivers the Decoration Day address at Arlington National
- Cemetery. Becomes president of the “Freedmen’s Savings and
- Trust Company.”
-
- 1872— April. Presides at the National Convention of colored citizens
- held in New Orleans. Chosen elector-at-large from the State of
- New York on the Presidential ticket which elected General Grant
- to a second term and is afterward designated to carry the vote
- of the electoral college of New York to Washington.
-
- 1876— April 14th. Delivers an address at the unveiling of the Lincoln
- Monument in Lincoln Park, Washington, D. C.
-
- 1877— Appointed Marshal of the District of Columbia, which office he
- held until 1881.
-
- 1878— May. Visits St. Michaels and is reconciled to his old master,
- Thomas Auld.
-
- 1879— September 12th. Reads a paper before the American Social Science
- Association in which he opposes the Negro exodus to Kansas.
-
- 1881— May. Appointed Recorder of Deeds in the District of Columbia.
- June 12th, visits the Lloyd plantation.
-
- 1882— January. _Life and Times of Frederick Douglass_ published. August
- 4th, his first wife dies: she was the mother of five children.
-
- 1884— January 24th. Marries Miss Helen Pitts, of New York.
-
- 1889— Appointed Minister and Consul General to Hayti.
-
- 1893— Commissioner for the Haytian Republic at the World’s Fair at
- Chicago. Makes an address on Negro Day at the Fair.
-
- 1895— February 20th. Dies at his home at Cedar Hill, Washington. Buried
- with honors from the Metropolitan Church (African Methodist
- Episcopal); public services being held subsequently in
- Rochester. His body finally interred beside those of his wife
- and daughter, in Mount Hope Cemetery, Rochester, N. Y.
-
-
-
-
- FREDERICK DOUGLASS
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I
- FREDERICK DOUGLASS, THE SLAVE
-
-
-The life of Frederick Douglass is the history of American slavery
-epitomized in a single human experience. He saw it all, lived it all,
-and overcame it all. What he saw and lived and suffered was not too much
-to pay, however, for a great career. “It is something,” as he himself
-said, “to couple one’s name with great occasions, and it was a great
-thing to me to be permitted to bear some humble part in this, the
-greatest that had come thus far to the American people.”
-
-Tradition says he was of noble lineage, but of this there is no written
-record. Frederick Douglass was born in the little town of Tuckahoe in
-Talbot County on the eastern shore of Maryland, supposedly in the month
-of February, 1817. The exact date of his birth was made the subject of
-diligent search by him in the days of his manhood and freedom, but
-nothing more definite than the month and year could be established. He
-gleaned so much as this, he says, “from certain events, the date of
-which I have since learned.”
-
-In the early life of this child of slave birth, there were several
-incidents that seemed to mark him for a high destiny. The very
-pretentiousness of the name he bore, Frederick Augustus Washington
-Bailey, was a possible indication of something unusual and promising in
-his appearance and demeanor. Though it is not known who was his father,
-it is fortunate that, out of the many uncertainties of his lowly origin,
-a reasonably clear outline of the personality of his mother has come to
-light and has been preserved. We cannot know her name or pedigree. The
-slave-child saw little of his slave-mother, but he made a great deal of
-this little. His references to her were frequent in his writings and
-public addresses, and they all indicate the pride and love of a heart
-true to its primal instincts.
-
-While he was a child, his mother was employed on a plantation, a
-distance of twelve miles from Tuckahoe. Her only opportunity of seeing
-her son was by walking the distance after her day’s work, to return to
-the field of her labors by dawn of the next day. To use his own
-language: “These little glimpses of my mother obtained under such
-circumstances and against such odds, meagre as they were, are indelibly
-stamped upon my memory. She was tall and finely proportioned; of dark
-and glossy complexion, with regular features; and among slaves she was
-remarkably sedate and dignified. She was the only slave in Tuckahoe who
-could read.” That she was a woman of marked superiority, and that her
-child inherited from her much that raised him above the other slaves
-among whom he lived, can be easily believed. When he had grown to
-manhood and while reading Prichard’s _Natural History of Man_, he found
-in the features of “King Rameses the Great” a strong resemblance to his
-mother. There were four other children, one boy named Perry and three
-girls. So far as is known, the brother and sisters showed none of the
-marks of superiority that distinguished Frederick Augustus Washington
-Bailey.
-
-Whatever training Frederick had up to eight years of age, he received
-from his Grandmother Bailey. It was in her cabin that he was born, and
-it was by her that he was cared for and nourished. He was very fond of
-this grandmother and has paid an affectionate tribute to her memory. She
-was a woman of strong character and of unusual intelligence. There were
-many things that she could do uncommonly well, such as gardening, and
-her good luck in fishing was proverbial. She was also famed as a
-fortune-teller and as such was sought far and wide by all classes of
-people. Because of her intelligence and natural gifts, she was allowed
-many privileges and a great deal of liberty; in her old age she was
-amply provided for by her master, and saved from hard toil. Judging from
-his frequent and fond references to his grandmother, young Douglass had
-better care and more attention than the ordinary slave-child; he
-probably had plenty to eat, and was taught good manners. Whatever it was
-possible for an impressionable mind to gain from contact with a strong
-and vigorous nature, the lad received from this unusual woman.
-
-Until he was seven years of age, young Fred felt few of the privations
-of slavery. In these childhood days, he probably was as happy and
-carefree as the white children in the “big house.” At liberty to come
-and go and play in the open sunshine, his early life was typical of the
-happier side of Negro life in slavery. What he missed of a mother’s
-affection and a father’s care, was partly made up to him by the
-indulgent kindness of his good grandmother.
-
-The owner of Fred and of his mother, grandmother, sisters, and brother,
-was Captain Aaron Anthony. He was the proprietor of several plantations
-and about thirty slaves near Tuckahoe. But Captain Anthony was something
-more, and this fact became important in the subsequent history of young
-Frederick Bailey; he had the distinction of being the manager of the
-vast estate of Colonel Edward Lloyd, who belonged to one of the foremost
-families of Maryland, and who owned between twenty and thirty
-plantations with over one thousand slaves. His home was on a plantation
-situated about thirty-five miles southeast of Baltimore and on the banks
-of the Wye River, the mansion and its surroundings being typical of the
-splendor and power of the wealthy slave-holder. When young Douglass
-first gazed upon all these signs of wealth, he says: “I became impressed
-with the baronial splendors of the Lloyd mansion and the princely mode
-of living; the vast army of enslaved men, women, and children; the
-completeness of the government that made it almost impossible for any of
-these slaves to escape; the subordination of my own master; the great
-number of mechanics that were skilled in all the trades, and the tutors
-from New England that were hired to teach the Lloyd children.”
-
-Near the mansion stood the plain but commodious home of Fred’s master,
-Captain Anthony. The Anthony family consisted of Mrs. Lucretia Anthony,
-the wife; Richard and Fred Anthony, sons; and an only daughter,
-Lucretia, who became the wife of Captain Thomas Auld.
-
-When Fred was between seven and eight years of age, his grandmother was
-directed by her master to take her grandson to the Lloyd plantation.
-After the boy arrived at his new home, he was put in charge of a
-slave-woman for whom the only name we know is “Aunt Katy.” This change
-brought him the first real hardship of his life. As an early consequence
-of it, he lost the care and guidance of his grandmother, his freedom to
-play, good food, and that affection which means so much to a child. When
-he came under the care of Aunt Katy, he began to feel for the first time
-the sting of unkindness. He has given a very disagreeable picture of
-this foster-mother. She was a woman of a hateful disposition, and
-treated the little stranger from Tuckahoe with extreme harshness. Her
-special mode of punishment was to deprive him of food. Indeed he was
-forced to go hungry most of the time, and if he complained, was beaten
-without mercy. He has described his misery on one particular night.
-After being sent supperless to bed, his suffering very soon became more
-than he could bear, and when everybody else in the cabin was asleep, he
-quietly took some corn and began to parch it before the open fireplace.
-While thus trying to appease his hunger by stealth, and feeling dejected
-and homesick, “who but my own dear mother should come in?” The
-friendless, hungry, and sorrowing little boy found himself suddenly
-caught up in her strong and protecting arms. “I shall never forget,” he
-says, “the indescribable expression of her countenance when I told her
-that Aunt Katy had said that she would starve the life out of me. There
-was a deep and tender glance at me, and a fiery look of indignation for
-Aunt Katy at the same moment, and when she took the parched corn from me
-and gave me, instead, a large ginger-cake, she read Aunt Katy a lecture
-which was never forgotten. That night, I learned, as never before, that
-I was not only a child but somebody’s child. I was grander on my
-mother’s knee than a king upon his throne. But my triumph was short. I
-dropped off to sleep and waked in the morning to find my mother gone,
-and myself again at the mercy of the virago in my master’s kitchen.”
-
-There is no record of another meeting between mother and son. She
-probably died shortly afterward, because if she had been within walking
-distance, he certainly would have seen her again. Her memory in his
-child’s mind was always that of a real and near personality. When he
-became older, and conscious of his superiority to his fellows, he was
-wont to say: “I am proud to attribute my love of letters, such as I may
-have, not to my presumed Anglo-Saxon father, but to my sable,
-unprotected, and uncultivated mother.” Thus, after his mother died, his
-vivid imagination kept before him her image, as she appeared to him that
-last time he saw her, through all his struggles for a fuller and freer
-life for himself and his race.
-
-With the loss of his mother and grandmother, he came more and more to
-realize the peculiar relation in which he and those about him stood to
-Colonel Lloyd and Captain Anthony. His active mind soon grasped the
-meaning of “master” and “slave.” While still a lad, longing for a
-mother’s care, he began to feel himself within the grasp of the curious
-thing that he afterward learned to know as “slavery.” As he grew older
-in years and understanding, he came also to see what manner of man his
-master was. He described Captain Anthony as a “sad man.” At times he was
-very gentle, and almost benevolent. But young Douglass was never able to
-forget that this same kindly slave-holder had refused to protect his
-cousin from a cruel beating by her overseer. The spectacle he had
-witnessed, when this beautiful young slave was whipped, had made a
-lasting and painful impression upon him. Vaguely he began to recognize
-the outlines of the institution which at once permitted and, to a
-certain degree, made necessary these cruelties. It was at this point
-that he began to speculate on the origin and nature of slavery.
-Meanwhile he became, in the course of his life on the plantation, the
-witness of other scenes, quite as harrowing, and the memory mingled with
-his reflections, and embittered them.
-
-During this time an event occurred which gave a new direction and a new
-impetus to the thoughts and purposes slowly taking form within him. This
-event was the successful escape of his Aunt Jennie and another slave. It
-caused a great commotion on the plantation. Nothing could happen in a
-Southern community that excited so many and such varied emotions as the
-escape of a slave from bondage:—terror and revenge; hope and fear,
-mingled with the images of the pursued and the pursuers, with
-speculation in regard to the capture of the fugitive, and with prayers
-for his success in the minds of the slaves.
-
-Young Douglass had begun to feel the burden of slavery and already had a
-dim consciousness of its fundamental injustice, but up to this point, he
-had known no other world than this immense plantation, and no other
-people than these masters, overseers, and slaves. His horizon was
-further enlarged and his imagination quickened by talking with certain
-Negroes on the Lloyd plantation, who could recall the event of their
-being brought from far-off Africa in slave-ships. Speaking of his own
-state of feeling at this time, he says: “I was already a fugitive from
-slavery in spirit and purpose.”
-
-From now on his quick and comprehending mind saw and suffered things
-that formerly never affected him. The hard and sometimes cruel
-discipline, toil from sunrise to sunset, scant food, the stifling of
-ambitions,—all these began now to be perceived and felt, and the
-impression they left sank into the soul of this rebellious boy. He saw a
-slave killed by an overseer, on no other charge than that of being
-“impudent.” “Crimes” of this nature were committed, as far as he could
-see, with impunity, and the memory of them haunted him by day and by
-night.
-
-Thus far Douglass had not felt the overseer’s whip. He was too small for
-anything except to run errands and to do light chores. Of course, he had
-been cuffed about by Aunt Katy; he says he seldom got enough to eat and
-he suffered continually from cold, since his entire wardrobe consisted
-of a tow sack. He was fortunate, however, in having two friends, who
-often saved him from the pangs of hunger, and who now and then gave him
-a word of kindness. One was young Daniel Lloyd, of the “great house,”
-and the other, Miss Lucretia, his master’s daughter. This lady seems to
-have had a real fondness for the boy, and would often give him something
-good to eat and at times caress him in such a way as to recall to his
-mind the few blessed moments he had known with his mother. Young Lloyd
-also often protected him from the impositions of other boys.
-
-To show how far the lad had advanced in his thinking, it is well to
-quote his own words on this point: “I used to contrast my condition with
-that of the blackbirds, in whose world and sweet songs, I fancied them
-so happy. Their apparent joy only deepened the shadows of my sorrow.
-There are thoughtful days in the lives of children, at least there were
-in mine, when they grapple with all the primary subjects of knowledge,
-and reach in a moment conclusions which no subsequent experience can
-shake. I was just as well convinced of the unjust, unnatural, and
-murderous character of slavery when nine years old, as I am now (1881).
-Without any appeal to books, to laws, or to authorities of any kind, I
-came to regard God as our Father, and condemned slavery as a crime.”
-
-When Fred became nine years old, the most important event in his life
-occurred. His master determined to send him to Baltimore to live with
-Hugh Auld, a brother of Thomas Auld. Baltimore at this time was little
-more than a name to young Douglass. When he reached the residence of Mr.
-and Mrs. Auld and felt the difference between the plantation cabin and
-this city home, it was to him, for a time, like living in Paradise. Mrs.
-Auld is described as a lady of great kindness of heart, and of a gentle
-disposition. She at once took a tender interest in the little servant
-from the plantation. He was much petted and well fed, permitted to wear
-boy’s clothes and shoes, and for the first time in his life, had a good
-soft bed to sleep in. His only duty was to take care of and play with
-Tommy Auld, which he found both an easy and an agreeable task.
-
-Young Douglass yet knew nothing about reading. A book was as much of a
-mystery to him as the stars at night. When he heard his mistress read
-aloud from the Bible, his curiosity was aroused. He felt so secure in
-her kindness that he had the boldness to ask her to teach him. Following
-her natural impulse to do kindness to others and without, for a moment,
-thinking of the danger, she at once consented. He quickly learned the
-alphabet and in a short time could spell words of three syllables. But
-alas, for his young ambition! When Mr. Auld discovered what his wife had
-done, he was both surprised and pained. He at once stopped the perilous
-practice, but it was too late. The precocious young slave had acquired a
-taste for book-learning. He quickly understood that these mysterious
-characters called letters were the keys to a vast empire from which he
-was separated by an enforced ignorance. In discussing the matter with
-his wife, Mr. Auld said: “If you teach him to read, he will want to know
-how to write, and with this accomplished, he will be running away with
-himself.” Mr. Douglass, referring to this conversation in later years,
-said: “This was decidedly the first anti-slavery speech to which I had
-ever listened. From that moment, I understood the direct pathway from
-slavery to freedom.”
-
-During the subsequent six years that he lived in Baltimore in the home
-of Mr. Auld, he was more closely watched than he had been before this
-incident, and his liberty to go and come was considerably curtailed. He
-declares that he was not allowed to be alone, when this could be helped,
-lest he would attempt to teach himself. But these were unwise
-precautions since they but whetted his appetite for learning and incited
-him to many secret schemes to elude the vigilance of his master and
-mistress. Everything now contributed to his enlightenment and prepared
-him for that freedom for which he thirsted. His occasional contact with
-free colored people, his visit to the wharves where he could watch the
-vessels going and coming, and his chance acquaintance with white boys on
-the street, all became a part of his education and were made to serve
-his plans. He got hold of a blue-back speller and carried it with him
-all the time. He would ask his little white friends in the street how to
-spell certain words and the meaning of them. In this way he soon learned
-to read. The first and most important book owned by him was called the
-_Columbian Orator_. He bought it with money secretly earned by blacking
-boots on the streets. It contained selected passages from such great
-orators as Lord Chatham, William Pitt, Fox, and Sheridan. These speeches
-were steeped in the sentiments of liberty, and were full of references
-to the “rights of man.” They gave to young Douglass a larger idea of
-liberty than was included in his mere dream of freedom for himself, and
-in addition they increased his vocabulary of words and phrases. The
-reading of this book unfitted him longer for restraint. He became all
-ears and all eyes. Everything he saw and read suggested to him a larger
-world, lying just beyond his reach. The meaning of the term “Abolition”
-came to him by a chance look at a Baltimore newspaper.
-
-Slavery and Abolition! The distance between these two points of
-existence seemed to have lessened greatly, after he had comprehended
-their meaning. “When I heard the word ‘Abolition,’ I felt the matter to
-be my personal concern. There was hope in this word.” As he afterward
-went about the city on his ordinary errands, or when at the wharf, even
-performing tasks that were not set for him to do, he was like another
-being. That word “Abolition” seemed to sing itself into his very soul,
-and when he permitted his thoughts to dwell on the possibilities that it
-opened to him, he was buoyed up with joyous expectations. He tried to
-find out something from everybody. He learned to write by copying
-letters on fences and walls and challenging his white playmates to find
-his mistakes; and at night when no one suspected him of being awake, he
-copied from an old copy-book of his young friend Tommy. Before he had
-formulated any plans for freedom for himself, he learned the important
-trick of writing “free passes” for runaway slaves.
-
-Notwithstanding his progress in gaining knowledge, his considerate
-master and kind mistress, his loving companion in Tommy, his good home,
-food and clothes, he was not happy or contented. None of these things
-could stifle his yearning to be free. He has aptly described his own
-feelings at this time in speaking of Mrs. Auld: “Poor lady, she did not
-understand my trouble, and I could not tell her. Nature made us friends,
-but slavery made us enemies. She aimed to keep me ignorant, but I
-resolved to know, although knowledge only increased my misery. My
-feelings were not the result of any marked cruelty in the treatment I
-received. It was slavery, not its mere incidents, I hated. Their feeding
-and clothing me well, could not atone for taking my liberty from me. The
-smiles of my master could not remove the deep sorrow that dwelt in my
-young bosom. We were both victims of the same overshadowing evil,—she as
-mistress, I as slave. I will not censure her too harshly.”
-
-But if his hopes and aspirations were excited by the vast and vague
-horizon which the thought of emancipation opened to him, he was, on the
-other hand, driven to something like despair when he considered how
-distant and inaccessible was this “land of freedom” of which he dreamed.
-The nearer and clearer appeared to him the possibility of this larger
-life, the more torturing became the restraints that kept him from
-seeking it. It was when thus pursuing in thought this phantom of a
-greater world although at the same time in despair of ever attaining it,
-that he found peace for a while in the consolation of religion. His
-imagination had been aroused by the preaching of a white minister, a
-Methodist, named Hanson. Feeling himself wretched and alone, he was in a
-state of mind, as so many others have been before and since, to find
-comfort in the thought of a kindly and overshadowing Power, a Protector
-to whom he might turn, in his great distress, without reserve and
-without misgiving. He surrendered himself completely to this new faith
-in God. In his search for more light, he met a lasting friend and guide
-in the person of a colored preacher to whom he fondly refers as “Uncle
-Lawson.” This good and pious old man lived very near the home of Mr.
-Auld. Young Douglass said of him: “He was my spiritual father. I loved
-him intensely, and was at his house every chance I could get.”
-
-Douglass’s master and mistress knew that he had become religious, and
-though they were at that time but lukewarm in their support of the
-church, they respected the piety in the young slave and seem to have
-encouraged it. But unfortunately the boy’s interest in religion had
-increased his desire to read, in order to become thoroughly acquainted
-with the Bible. “I have gathered,” says Mr. Douglass, “scattered pages
-of the Bible from the filthy street gutters, and washed and dried them,
-that in moments of leisure I might get a word or two of wisdom from
-them.”
-
-Uncle Lawson could read a little and Douglass, who went frequently with
-him to prayer meeting, spent much of his spare time on Sunday helping
-him decipher its pages. When his master learned what he was doing, he
-threatened to whip him if he went to Lawson’s again, but he stole away
-whenever he could and got his needed instruction in the simple lessons
-of faith.
-
-Uncle Lawson was probably the first colored person that young Douglass
-had met who appreciated his longings and powers. He was also the first
-person who awakened in him a dim consciousness that he was destined for
-a public career. Speaking of this, Douglass once said: “His words made a
-deep impression upon me, and I verily felt that some such work was
-before me, though I could not see how I could ever engage in its
-performance.” The old preacher could go no further than to give
-utterance to the familiar exhortations: “Trust in the Lord, the Lord can
-make you free”; “Ask in faith and He will give you what you ask.” The
-boy’s great respect for the honesty and piety of Uncle Lawson lent these
-words a deep significance, and he never forgot the lessons that he
-learned from this simple-minded man. How important was this teaching is
-evidenced by Mr. Douglass’s own testimony: “Thus assisted and thus
-cheered on under the inspiration of the preacher, I worked and prayed
-with a light heart, believing that my life was under the guidance of a
-wisdom higher than my own. I always prayed that God would in His great
-good mercy and His own good time, deliver me from my bondage.” After
-Douglass learned how to write with tolerable ease, he began to copy from
-the Bible and the Methodist hymn-books at night, when he was supposed to
-be asleep. He always regarded this religious experience as the most
-important part of his education; it had the effect, not only of
-enlarging his mind, but also of restraining his impatience, and
-softening a disposition that was growing hard and bitter with brooding
-over the disadvantages suffered by himself and his race. He greatly
-needed something that would help him to look beyond his bondage and
-encourage him to hope for ultimate freedom.
-
-While he was undergoing this, to him, novel religious experience, and
-while he was gradually being adjusted to the situation in which he found
-himself, there came one of those dreaded changes in the fortunes of
-slave-masters that made the status of the slave painfully uncertain. His
-real master, Captain Anthony, died, and this event, complicated with
-some family quarrel, resulted in Douglass being recalled from Baltimore
-to the plantation. This was a depressing incident in his slave-life. It
-is true that Mr. and Mrs. Auld were not at this time as gentle with him
-as when he first came to the city. He was under stricter discipline, was
-constantly watched, and his liberties were circumscribed in many ways
-that were both inconvenient and irritating. But in spite of all this he
-was comparatively free from the usual severities of slavery. He had many
-interests and many happy relationships that he was able to cultivate
-outside of the Auld household. He had become something of a leader among
-the young colored men of the city. He had taught many of them their
-letters. Among the white boys of his acquaintance he also had a large
-circle of friends, who loved him and were loyal to him. Most important
-of all was his affection for his religious teacher, Uncle Lawson.
-Through these attachments in the more complex life of the city, and the
-opportunities for mental and spiritual growth which they offered, he was
-able to throw off to a great degree the gloom and doubt of his earlier
-youth. He had begun to feel that he was actually preparing himself for
-that larger life of leadership in freedom, that had been hinted to him
-by Uncle Lawson. But all these happy relations were rudely severed when
-he was recalled to the plantation.
-
-“It did seem,” he said, “that every time the young tendrils of my
-affection became attached, they were rigidly broken off by some
-unnatural, outside power, and I was looking away to Heaven for the rest
-denied to me on earth.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II
- BACK TO PLANTATION LIFE
-
-
-When young Douglass left Baltimore to go back to the plantation, he was
-about sixteen years of age;—strong, healthy, and fully capable of the
-hard work of a field hand. But this was not the most difficult task he
-now had to face. Conditions that he met there were to test his character
-as it had never been tested before, and the trials he endured during
-this period profoundly influenced all his future life. For the first
-time in many years, he was to feel the “pitiless pinchings of hunger.”
-He says: “So wretchedly starved were we that we were compelled to live
-at the expense of our neighbors, or steal from our own larder. This was
-a hard thing to do, but after much reflection, I reasoned myself into
-the belief that there was no other way to do—and after all there could
-be no harm in it, considering that my labor and person were the property
-of Master Thomas, and that I was deprived of the necessaries of life. It
-was simply appropriating what was my own, since the health and strength
-derived from such food were exerted in his service. To be sure, this was
-stealing according to the law and gospel I had heard from the pulpit,
-but I had begun to attach less importance to what dropped from that
-quarter, on certain points.”
-
-Having found a principle upon which he could justify, against the
-precepts of morality, the practice of stealing from his own master, in
-order to get enough to eat, it was not difficult to go farther and
-discover a warrant based on grounds quite as logical, for the habit of
-stealing from others beside his master, when the same necessity seemed
-to justify it.
-
-“I am not only a slave of Master Thomas,” he argued, “but I am also a
-slave of society at large. Society at large has bound itself in form and
-fact to assist Master Thomas in robbing me of my liberty and the just
-reward of my labor; therefore whatever rights I have against Master
-Thomas, I have equally against those confederated with him.” It is thus
-that Mr. Douglass, writing years afterward, construed the argument with
-which the boy solved the doubts and questions arising in his mind when
-he found himself following the custom, prevalent among the slaves, of
-persistent petty stealing.
-
-Whatever one may think of this theory as a justification for the
-practice, it is interesting as showing in Douglass, even as a boy, the
-tendency to get clear ideas in regard to his own conduct and the conduct
-of those about him, and to make his actions conform to some fundamental
-rule. A boy who was disposed to think thus clearly and to apply the test
-of elementary principles to the lives and actions of those about him,
-was already a dangerous slave. And so the summer of 1833 found Douglass
-more determined than ever to run away.
-
-Meanwhile he tells us that there were several incidents which served
-still further to shape in his mind the view of his master and the class
-his master represented. About this time there was a religious revival in
-the neighborhood of St. Michaels, where Douglass lived. Master Thomas
-became converted and was afterward a devoted member and class-leader in
-the Methodist church. Young Douglass attended the camp-meeting, and,
-from his position behind the preacher’s stand, where a space had been
-marked off for colored people, watched the process of conversion in his
-master with great interest and close attention.
-
-Another episode tended to add to the perplexity in the young slave’s
-mind and still further undermine his faith in the moral superiority of
-the master-class, and in the religion which based its justification of
-slavery on the fact of that superiority. To add further to his
-confusion, he had read somewhere, in the Methodist discipline, that “the
-slave-holder shall not be eligible to an official station in the
-church.” When he saw Mr. Auld making open confession of his sins, and
-afterward given official position in the church, he felt sure that a
-great change must necessarily come over his disposition and character.
-But his master’s face, Douglass said, became more stern with increasing
-piety, and the discipline he enforced upon his slaves was even more
-rigid. This was a severe test of the religious convictions of the young
-slave-boy. He knew that religion had made him better, kinder, and more
-appreciative of all that was true and beautiful. It had also given him
-comfort during the period of his servitude. He had looked forward, with
-sincere faith in the power of religion, to some marked change in Master
-Thomas. The resulting experience left him disappointed and confused.
-
-At the request of an earnest and sincerely pious white man, named
-Wilson, Douglass had joined in an attempt to conduct a Sunday-school for
-young colored people. During the second meeting of this innocent
-company, it was violently broken up by a mob, chief among whom was his
-master, Thomas Auld. The men were armed with sticks and other missiles
-and drove away both pupils and teachers, warning them never to meet
-again. The only explanation given for this violent interruption of what
-seemed a harmless and worthy occupation, was the rough remark of one
-member of the party, that Douglass wanted to be another Nat Turner. The
-fear inspired by his unfortunate slave insurrection was responsible for
-much of the hardship which Negroes in the South, free and slave, were at
-this period compelled to endure. The memory of it hardened the heart of
-many a master against his slaves and made him cruel and suspicious where
-he would naturally have been kind and confident.
-
-But Thomas Auld seems not to have had even this excuse for some of his
-acts which still further embittered the young slave, already grown
-critical and suspicious of all that his master did. It was not long
-after his conversion, Douglass says, that he began to beat the boy’s
-crippled and unfortunate cousin, Henny, with unusual barbarity, finally
-setting her adrift to care for herself. All these incidents crowded
-quickly upon the young slave’s mind at a time when he had already begun
-to test and measure the actions of his master and those about him by the
-principles of universal right and justice, which his study of the
-_Columbian Orator_ had furnished him, and which his reflections and
-comparisons were steadily making more clear and definite. The effect was
-to render him bold and rebellious to such an extent that he soon became
-a fit subject to be “broken in” by some overseer, who knew how to handle
-“impudent” slaves.
-
-A man named Edward Covey, living at Bayside, at no great distance from
-the camp-ground where Thomas Auld was converted, had a wide reputation
-for “breaking in unruly niggers.” Covey was a “poor white” and a farm
-renter. To this man Douglass was hired out for a year. In the month of
-January, 1834, he started for his new master, with his little bundle of
-clothes. From what we have already seen of this sensitive, thoughtful
-young slave of seventeen years, it is not difficult to understand his
-state of mind. Up to this time he had had a comparatively easy life. He
-had seldom suffered hardships such as fell to the lot of many slaves
-whom he knew. To quote his own words: “I was now about to sound
-profounder depths in slave-life. Starvation made me glad to leave Thomas
-Auld’s, and the cruel lash made me dread to go to Covey’s.” Escape,
-however, was impossible. The picture of “the slave-driver,” painted in
-the lurid colors that Mr. Douglass’s indignant memories furnished him,
-shows the dark side of slavery in the South. During the first six weeks
-he was with Covey, he was whipped, either with sticks or cowhides, every
-week. With his body one continuous ache from his frequent floggings, he
-was kept at work in field or woods from the dawn of day until the
-darkness of night. He says: “Mr. Covey succeeded in breaking me in body,
-soul, and spirit. The overwork and the cruel chastisements, of which I
-was the victim, combined with the ever growing and soul-devouring
-thought, ‘I am a slave—a slave for life, a slave with no rational ground
-to hope for freedom,’ had done their worst.”
-
-He confesses that at one time he was strongly tempted to take his own
-life and that of Covey. Finally, his sufferings of body and soul became
-so great that further endurance seemed impossible. While in this
-condition, he determined upon the daring step of returning to his
-master, Thomas Auld, in order to lay before him the story of abuse. He
-felt sure that, if for no other reason than the protection of property
-from serious impairment, his master would interfere in his behalf. He
-even expected sympathy and assurances of future protection. In all this
-he was grievously disappointed. Auld not only refused sympathy and
-protection, but would not even listen to his complaints, and immediately
-sent him back to his dreaded master to face the added penalty of running
-away. The poor lone boy was plunged into the depths of despair. A
-feeling that he had been deserted by both God and man took possession of
-him.
-
-Covey was lying in wait for him, knowing full well that he must return
-as defenseless as he went away. As soon as Douglass came near the place
-where the white man was hiding, the latter made a leap at Fred for the
-purpose of tying him for a flogging. But Douglass escaped and took to
-the woods where he concealed himself for a day and a night. His
-condition was desperate. He felt that he could not endure another
-whipping, and yet there seemed to him no alternative. His first impulse
-was to pray, but he remembered that Covey also prayed. Convinced, at
-length, that there was no appeal but to his own courage, he resolved to
-go back and face whatever must come to him. It so happened that it was a
-Sunday morning and, much to his surprise, he met Covey who was on his
-way to church, and who, when he saw the runaway, greeted him with a
-pleasant smile. “His religion,” says Douglass, “prevented him from
-breaking the Sabbath, but not from breaking my bones on any other day in
-the week.”
-
-On Monday morning, Douglass was up early, half hoping that he would be
-permitted to resume his work without punishment. Covey was astir
-betimes, too, and had laid aside his Sunday mildness of manner. His
-first business was to carry out his fixed purpose of whipping the young
-runaway. In the meantime Fred had likewise fully decided upon a course
-of action. He was ready to submit to any kind of work, however hard or
-unreasonable, but determined to defend himself against an attempt at
-another flogging. In the cold passion that took possession of him, the
-slave-boy became utterly reckless of consequences, reasoning to himself
-that the limit of suffering at the hands of this relentless
-slave-breaker had already been reached. He was resolved to fight and did
-fight. He began his morning work in peace, obeying promptly every order
-from his master, and while he was in the act of going up to the
-stable-loft for the purpose of pitching down some hay, he was caught and
-thrown by Covey, in an attempt to get a slip knot about his legs.
-Douglass flew at Covey’s throat recklessly, hurled his antagonist to the
-ground, and held him firmly. Blood followed the nails of the infuriated
-young slave. He scarcely knew how to account for his fighting strength,
-and his dare-devil spirit so dumbfounded the master, that he gaspingly
-said: “Are you going to resist me, you young scoundrel?” “Yes, sir,” was
-the quick reply.
-
-Finding himself baffled, Covey called for assistance. His Cousin Hughes
-came to aid him, but as he was attempting to put a noose over the unruly
-slave’s foot, Douglass promptly gave him a blow in the stomach which at
-once put him out of the combat and he fled. After Hughes had been
-disabled, Covey called on first one and then another of his slaves, but
-each refused to assist him. Finding himself fairly outdone by his angry
-antagonist, Covey quit with the discreet remark: “Now, you young
-scoundrel, you go to work; I would not have whipped you half so hard, if
-you had not resisted.”
-
-Douglass had thus won his first victory and was never again threatened
-or flogged by his master. The effect of this encounter, as far as he
-himself was concerned, was to increase his self-respect, and to give him
-more courage for the future. He said that, “when a slave cannot be
-flogged, he is more than half-free.” To the other slaves he became a
-hero, and Covey was not anxious to advertise his complete failure to
-break in this “unruly nigger.” It speaks well for the natural dignity
-and good sense of young Douglass that he neither boasted of his triumph,
-nor did anything rash as a consequence of it, as might have been
-expected from a boy of his age and spirit.
-
-On Christmas Day, 1834, young Douglass’s time with Covey was out. He
-then learned that he had been hired to a William Freeland, who owned a
-large plantation near St. Michaels, and by January 1st, was with his new
-master. Mr. Freeland was a great improvement upon Covey. He was less
-direct in his professions, but more humane in his manner toward his
-slaves. He was what was called a “kind master.” He did not overwork or
-underfeed his slaves and he was sparing of the lash. All this was
-Paradise to young Douglass, when compared with the strenuous life he had
-led with Covey. The effect of so much kindness was evidenced in the
-character of the Freeland slaves. Mr. Douglass describes them as a
-superior class of men and women, and he loved, esteemed, and confided in
-them, as with real friends, generous and true.
-
-With these new and better conditions and with these superior companions
-in bondage, Douglass felt a renewal of that old impulse to do something
-for his fellow slaves. He naturally first turned to the thought of
-teaching them to read and write. He found time and spirit again to look
-at his library,—the blue-back speller and the _Columbian Orator_. He
-first started a Sunday-school under the trees, at a safe distance from
-the “big house,” gathering together some thirty young people. They were
-making fine progress, when, one Sunday, his former experience was
-repeated, and they were rushed upon and scattered. The school was again
-started, however, and this time Douglass seems successfully to have
-evaded the vigilance of his master. In addition to the Sunday-school, he
-devoted three evenings a week to his fellow slaves.
-
-His leadership among all the Negroes was recognized and respected by
-them. This brought with it his first consciousness of that peculiar
-power over men, which in after-life made him so conspicuous a figure
-among the heroes of the Abolition struggle. The whole year at Freeland’s
-was spent in self-development and in the mental and spiritual
-improvement of his companions in bonds.
-
-At the end of this time he learned that his services had been hired for
-another twelve months to Mr. Freeland. This seemed to promise good for
-him in the future. The Bible, the spelling book, and the _Columbian
-Orator_ were read and re-read and, at each new reading, he felt an
-enlargement of mind and an increasing thirst for liberty. The kindness
-of Mr. Freeland and the pleasant companionship of the Harris brothers
-and other slaves, served only to increase his discontent. He liked his
-master and would gladly have remained with him as a free man, but he
-could never overcome his increasing impatience of the restraints of
-slavery, and, with this ambition for liberty, his troubles began. He
-made a solemn vow to himself that the year should not close without
-witnessing some earnest effort on his part to escape. This vow also
-included the freedom of his slave-companions, for whom he had conceived
-a lasting attachment. He succeeded in winning to his scheme five trusted
-confidants. These were John and Henry Harris, Sandy Jenkins, the
-footman; Charles Roberts, and Henry Bailey. Young Douglass impressed
-them with the perils of the undertaking. His knowledge of the
-difficulties of a successful escape, little as it actually was,
-surprised and awed them.
-
-When he had fully determined upon his plans, he found that it would
-perhaps require many weeks to perfect them. His first task was to study
-the character, the temperament, and the various personal qualifications
-of the men whom he proposed to make his partners in this dangerous
-undertaking. He must learn whether they were proof against the sin of
-betrayal under all possible circumstances. Each man must cultivate an
-unhesitating faith in the others. Each must have unlimited courage, both
-physical and moral. All must learn the tricks of self-concealment, and
-of assumed indifference and deception. They must understand the various
-kinds of perils they were likely to encounter. The kidnapper, the
-slave-catcher, the black and white detectives, and the whole range of
-restraints that, like a continuous wall, hemmed in a slave, must be
-considered and understood. If he had hope in his heart, he must not
-betray it by so much as a look, in manner or in speech. Overseers were
-all eyes and ears and quick to suspect something was wrong if a slave
-seemed unusually thoughtful, sullen, or happy. They were by no means
-easily deceived as to the real intention of a slave planning to run
-away. To become an object of suspicion was merely to insure that the
-suspected slave would be the more closely guarded. Young Douglass fully
-realized the severity of the penalty that must follow failure, but he
-never wavered in his determination to make a dash for liberty, at any
-cost.
-
-Having satisfied himself that his companions were proof against
-treachery and were of the right sort of mettle, he began to study the
-practical means of escape. There were no well-marked routes from slavery
-to freedom, no highways, byways, or “underground railways,” known to him
-at that time. Such knowledge belonged wholly to the region north of the
-boundary line of freedom. He had heard of slaves escaping, but how they
-got away and by what route was always a mystery. He had heard that there
-was a region called North, and that in this far haven, white and black
-people alike were free. He had heard of a land called Canada, but its
-location on maps and charts was unknown to him. He had no conception of
-the physical size of the world. He had seen Baltimore, St. Michaels, and
-the adjoining plantations; beyond this all was blank. He knew something
-of theology, but nothing of geography. He did not know that there were
-states called New York and Massachusetts. New York City was the northern
-limit of his knowledge. He had received vague hints that the dominion of
-slavery was without boundary and that even in New York, there were
-slave-catchers and kidnappers. But it was at this time an unknown land.
-
-In these difficulties, young Douglass looked steadily North in the
-direction of the free-states, seeking some chance guidance. His habit of
-reasoning out things that in any way affected his status as a slave and
-as a man, has already been noted. Everything that he saw, or heard, or
-read enlarged his knowledge of life and its meaning. His stay in
-Baltimore had been a sort of school to him. Here for the first time, he
-had seen free colored people; the coming and going of ships gave him his
-first ideas of direction and distance; the Chesapeake Bay was a thing of
-wonder;—all of which awakened in him many thoughts that led him away
-from bondage.
-
-While young Douglass was secretly working out his plans for escape, one
-of his confidants, Sandy, the footman, said to him: “I dreamed last
-night that I was roused from sleep by strange noises, like a swarm of
-angry birds; looking to see what it was, I saw you, Frederick, in the
-claws of a large bird surrounded by a large number of birds of all
-colors and sizes. They were all picking at you. Now I saw that as plain
-as I see you now, and honey, watch the Friday night dream; there is
-sump’n in it, sho’s you born, dere is indeed, honey.” Douglass confessed
-that the dream related to him by old Sandy disturbed him for awhile. He
-felt sure that his plans were seriously handicapped by unseen forces of
-some sort, but he soon regained his usual courage and overcame his
-superstitious apprehensions. The Saturday night before Easter had been
-fixed upon as the time for flight. A large canoe, owned by a Mr.
-Hamilton, had been seized and made ready for the confederates. They were
-to paddle down the Chesapeake Bay to its head. Douglass had already
-written out passes for each of the fugitives in the following form:—
-
- “This is to certify that I, the undersigned, have given leave to the
- bearer, my servant, John, full liberty to go to Baltimore to spend the
- Easter holidays.—W. H.
-
- “_Near St. Michaels, Talbot Co., Md._”
-
-On the night before the proposed flight, every possible detail had been
-rehearsed and arranged. The resolution of each party to the conspiracy
-was tested and proved firm, except that of Sandy, who, much to the
-disgust of Douglass, backed out. Early Saturday morning, they were all
-at work in the usual way. Douglass was the only one who was troubled
-with a presentiment of evil. He turned abruptly to Sandy, who was
-working near him, and said: “We are betrayed!” Within a short while his
-worst fears were being realized. Looking toward the “big house,” he
-easily discerned a stranger on horseback and an unusual stir. It was not
-long before he was abruptly accused of plotting to run away, and taken
-into custody. Thus it turned out that at the very time he had planned to
-be on the road to freedom, he was a prisoner bound for Easton, to be
-examined by a magistrate.
-
-His companions, the two Harris brothers, were likewise accused. Henry,
-however, was the only one who did not tamely submit to being arrested
-and handcuffed. When a revolver was pointed at him by the officer, he
-knocked it from the man’s hands and dared any one to shoot him. The
-recalcitrant slave was soon overpowered, however, and all were led away.
-
-The excitement caused by Harris’s daring revolt served one purpose, of
-which young Douglass’s alertness enabled him to take advantage. He
-adroitly threw his pass, the only incriminating evidence against them,
-in the fire, and by some secret sign advised the others to eat theirs
-with their bread on the journey, which they did.
-
-When they were examined, each stoutly disclaimed all knowledge of plans
-for running away and denied that they had any intention of doing so.
-Notwithstanding the total lack of evidence against them, the officers
-and Douglass’s master were thoroughly convinced that they were plotting
-some wickedness. There was always something so mysterious, as well as
-commanding in the manner of young Douglass, that he was naturally
-regarded as the ringleader, when any misconduct of the slaves was
-complained of. His fellows in bonds treated him with a deference never
-shown toward any but white people. As a slave he worked well and did his
-full duty, but his masters always regarded him with suspicion, and
-something akin to fear.
-
-The examination of the four culprits must have afforded an interesting
-scene. Young Douglass, though a slave in chains, as well as a prisoner
-at the bar, had the temerity to assume the rôle of attorney and to
-attempt the defense of his comrades, for whose present predicament he
-felt himself responsible. When Thomas Auld insisted that the evidence in
-hand, showing the intention to run away, was strong enough to hang in
-case of need, Douglass promptly replied: “The cases are not equal. If
-murder were committed, the thing is done, but we have not run away.
-Where is the evidence against us? We were quietly at work.” Douglass was
-confident that the only tangible evidence against them had been
-skilfully destroyed, and he knew also that his companions had been slyly
-but effectively coached as to what to say and how to act when they came
-before the examining magistrate.
-
-So completely had they failed to make young Douglass and his companions
-convict themselves, that very shortly Mr. Freeland came to the jail and
-took home his own slaves, leaving Douglass still in confinement. He was
-glad to know that his companions had escaped punishment, but by this
-last separation from them he seemed to have reached the very depths of
-the desolation which it was the lot of a slave to experience.
-
-Through the bars of his imprisonment, he could watch the slave-traders
-from Georgia, Alabama, and Louisiana apparently eager to get hold of
-him. He could even hear them pass comments upon his size, strength, and
-general appearance, and make guesses as to his age. For the first time
-since he left Covey’s, he felt both hopeless and helpless. If he should
-be sold and sent down into the far South, he well knew that all chances
-for escape would be cut off forever.
-
-While in this condition of dejection and hopelessness, the unexpected
-happened. His owner, Thomas Auld, who, in spite of Douglass’s
-rebelliousness, always cherished a peculiar fondness for him, ordered
-his release from jail, and at once decided to send him back to Baltimore
-to live with Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Auld. In telling Fred what he intended to
-do, he said that he wanted him to learn a trade, and that if he would
-behave himself and give him no more trouble, he would emancipate him
-when he became twenty-five years old.
-
-The happy assurance that he was not to be punished and that he was again
-to have the privileges of the city, was at first almost too much to be
-believed. All of his hopes for ultimate freedom were revived and his
-confidence in himself, which had been severely shaken by his recent
-failure and disgrace, was renewed. Under the circumstances, it seems to
-have been the only wise and practicable course his master could pursue.
-Mr. Freeland would not again allow him to come upon his plantation;
-Covey had failed to break his spirit; and his reputation as a would-be
-runaway and a “smart nigger” made him a desperate asset in the
-slave-market of Talbot County. In sending him to Baltimore to learn a
-trade, with a possibility of ultimate freedom, it was thought that he
-would be more serviceable and more tractable. Then, again, the most
-threatening aspect of young Douglass’s attempted flight was the daring
-plot to use the Chesapeake Bay. Heretofore the slaves who had succeeded
-in making good their escape were compelled to find a path through deadly
-swamps and woods, other avenues being so carefully guarded that a
-successful runaway was very rare. Every effort, therefore, must be made
-to keep the Douglass venture a secret; he must be removed as far as
-possible from his old plantation-life. If he had had a different master,
-nothing could have saved him from the slave-traders. The
-good-heartedness of Thomas Auld was the only thing that preserved our
-young hero for that larger life which he was to make for himself, and
-help to make for so many others of his race.
-
-When, through the kindness of Mr. Auld, Douglass again turned his face
-toward Baltimore, he fully realized that the change was fraught with
-importance to him. He remembered that it was in this city he had caught
-the first suggestion that there was a life to be lived above the low
-levels of a slave. There, in the family of Hugh Auld, he had learned to
-wear clothes, had acquired good manners and the ability to read, and,
-for the first time, had felt, in the person of his teacher and
-benefactor, Mrs. Sophia Auld, the civilizing and softening touch of a
-superior woman’s kindness.
-
-To his alert and observing mind, Baltimore again became a real school.
-It quickened his perception, and fired his imagination, and was the
-place, above all others, short of a free state, where he most longed to
-live. Hugh Auld easily succeeded in getting young Douglass apprenticed
-to a calker, in the extensive ship-yards of William Gardiner, on Fell’s
-Point. The conditions under which he had to work were very trying; he
-did not mind the severe labor, but he was much disturbed by the intense
-prejudice existing among the white boys and mechanics. During the six
-months that he worked with this firm, every one seemed to have license
-to make use of and abuse him. He was not a coward, and would quickly
-strike back at a man who insulted or attempted to maltreat him. Finally,
-however, he was assaulted by a crowd of ruffians and frightfully beaten.
-His face was swollen and he was covered with blood. In this condition,
-he reported himself to Mr. Auld, who was furious when he beheld the
-pitiable state of his slave. Mrs. Auld took pity upon him and kindly
-dressed his wounds, and nursed him until they were healed. In the
-meantime he was angrily withdrawn from Mr. Gardiner’s employ, and it was
-sought to bring to punishment the perpetrators of the assault. Auld
-appeared with Douglass before a magistrate, and explaining how his slave
-had been attacked without provocation, demanded a warrant for the guilty
-parties, but both were surprised and chagrined when the magistrate
-replied: “I am sorry, sir, but I cannot move in this matter except upon
-the oath of a white man.” This incident made a deep impression on
-Douglass. It gave him a new and vivid sense of his helplessness and
-dependence, and measurably increased his determination to be free at any
-cost.
-
-Hugh Auld soon after became foreman in the ship-yards of Walter Price,
-of Baltimore. He took Douglass with him and, under his protection, Fred
-finished learning his trade and within one year became able to command
-and receive from seven to nine dollars per week, the largest wages at
-that time paid for such labor. All of his earnings, of course, were
-turned over to his master. From now onward he had no trouble in securing
-work. He was permitted to find his own employment and make his own
-arrangements or contracts for pay. This was a distinct advancement over
-his former condition of servitude, and was his first experience of
-self-direction and self-dependence.
-
-He was soon known among the colored people of the city as a young man of
-singular power. His superiority of mind was recognized and, almost
-without being conscious of it, he became a leader. There was at that
-time an organization of free colored people, known as the East Baltimore
-Improvement Society. Although membership in this exclusive body was
-limited to free people, young Douglass was eagerly admitted. This was
-the first organization of any kind, outside of the church, to which he
-had ever belonged. It is probable that he had here his first opportunity
-to exercise his natural gift of eloquence.
-
-But with all these improvements in his conditions of life, he was not
-happy. A sense of bondage, however slight, made him restless and
-impatient. “Why should I be a slave?” was the question that went with
-him night and day. He has truly said: “To make a contented slave, you
-must make him a thoughtless one.”
-
-Kind treatment, liberty to come and go as he pleased and to make his own
-contracts for employment; mingling with freemen, as if he himself were
-free; the high esteem in which he was held by fellow workmen and
-employers, and by free people; and the promise of emancipation at
-twenty-five years of age, were no consolation to the heart that panted
-to be its own. He had already become too much of a man to remain a
-willing slave!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III
- ESCAPE FROM SLAVERY; LEARNING THE WAYS OF FREEDOM
-
-
-For the second time in his life, Frederick Douglass now began earnestly
-to study the possible means of permanently breaking his fetters. At the
-end of every week, when he turned his entire earnings over to his
-master, his sense of injustice and indignation increased. He was
-scarcely able to conceal his discontent. His intense longing to be free
-must have betrayed itself in his countenance, for very soon he noticed
-that he was being closely watched. The fact that he had at one time made
-an attempt to run away caused more or less uneasiness.
-
-Young Douglass soon found that the difficulties of escape were quite as
-great in Baltimore as on the Freeland plantation. The railroads running
-from that city to Philadelphia were compelled to enforce the most
-stringent regulations with reference to colored people. Even free
-Negroes found it difficult to comply with them. Every one applying for a
-railway ticket was required to show his “free papers” and to be measured
-and carefully examined before he could enter the cars. Besides this, he
-was not allowed to travel by night. Similar regulations were enforced by
-steamboat companies. In addition to all these difficulties, every road
-and turnpike was picketed with kidnappers on the lookout for fugitive
-slaves. Douglass found it much easier to learn the obstacles than the
-aids to successful escape. The former were many and obvious; the latter
-were few and difficult to discover. It was impossible to profit by the
-experience of those who had run the gauntlet successfully, and whenever
-it was learned that some keen-scented slave had found a pathway to
-freedom, the information was carefully concealed from those in bonds.
-Every slave preparing to escape his fetters must act without guide or
-precedent, and form his own plan of deliverance.
-
-Douglass was now convinced that he must hereafter be the arbiter of his
-own fortunes. He at once decided that his great need was money. The
-problem was how to get the necessary sum. His whole time and all of his
-earnings belonged to his master, and so long as this was the case the
-funds must still be a long way off. He finally determined to propose to
-his owner, Master Thomas Auld, that he be allowed to have his own time.
-In other words, he would agree to pay him so much a week, and all in
-excess of that sum he would keep as his own. This proposition merely
-angered Mr. Auld, who accused young Douglass of scheming to run away,
-and threatened him with severe punishment, if he ever mentioned such a
-thing again. But Douglass had too much at stake to give up. He made the
-same proposition to Master Hugh Auld and it was accepted. By the terms
-of this agreement young Douglass was to be allowed all of his time, and
-to make his own contracts and collect his own wages; while in return for
-these privileges, he was to pay his master three dollars each week,
-board and clothe himself, and buy his own tools.
-
-This was a pretty hard bargain, but it meant his first step toward
-freedom, so he entered upon it cheerfully. From May until August, 1838,
-he worked for himself under the above conditions, kept all his
-obligations, and was able to save out of his earnings a neat sum of
-money. In the month of August occurred an unfortunate interruption of
-his plans. One Saturday night, instead of taking his wages to his
-master, he was persuaded to go out of town to a camp-meeting. He
-convinced himself that there could be no objection to this, since he had
-the money and purposed turning it in early Monday morning. Owing to some
-misunderstanding, however, he was compelled to remain one day longer
-than he had intended. On coming back to the city, he went directly to
-his master and made his payment. Instead of being indifferent to his
-absence, Hugh Auld was almost beside himself with rage. Addressing
-Douglass, he said: “You rascal, I have a good mind to give you a sound
-whipping. How dare you go out of the city without my leave? Now, you
-scoundrel, you have done for yourself; you shall have your time no
-longer. The next thing I shall hear of you, will be your running away.
-Bring home your tools at once; I will teach you how to go off in this
-way.”
-
-Poor Douglass was for the moment dismayed by this very serious
-consequence of an innocent error of judgment. He had had his own way so
-long, he had begun to feel that his master’s only interest in him was
-the regular payment of the three dollars per week which he had been
-receiving during the previous four months. All his hopes for liberty had
-been staked on the continuance of this arrangement for a few months
-longer. Douglass understood the man who was now his master. He had lived
-with him long enough not to take his threats too seriously. Mr. Auld
-would have been indeed shortsighted if he had not used an occasion of
-this kind to impress his slave with the seriousness of taking such a
-liberty. Douglass did not, therefore, lose heart and as a result of this
-episode, he made two important resolutions. One was to go out in search
-of work and return to the old contract; and the other was to fix
-September 3, 1838, as the day of his flight from slavery.
-
-He soon found good employment in the Butler ship-yards. Mr. Butler
-thought much of the young slave calker and gave him every opportunity to
-earn good wages. At the end of the first week, he presented to his
-master the whole of his earnings, amounting to nine dollars, which was
-accepted with evident satisfaction. For the moment Master Hugh seemed
-entirely to have forgotten the reprehensible conduct of only a few days
-before. Having thus shrewdly helped his master to recover his good
-temper and natural kindness, Douglass took special pains to keep him
-pleased and unsuspicious. The second week of his employment, he again
-turned over the whole amount of his wages, nine dollars. Mr. Auld was
-overjoyed at this earning capacity of Douglass and as an evidence of it
-made him a present of twenty-five cents. In the last week he worked as a
-slave, he gave his master six dollars.
-
-Ever since the first trouble with Auld, he had been pushing his plans to
-redeem his pledge to himself that he would run away on Monday, September
-3, 1838. These were anxious days and many small details had to be
-mastered. He must carefully avoid anything in manner or word which could
-excite the slightest suspicion. He had to test the fidelity of a number
-of free colored people whose aid, in secret ways, was very essential to
-him. Who these persons were, has never been revealed and in fact, it was
-not until many years after emancipation that Mr. Douglass disclosed to
-the public how he succeeded in making his daring escape. “Murder
-itself,” he says, “was not more severely and surely punished in the
-state of Maryland than aiding and abetting the escape of a slave.”
-
-Young Douglass’s flight had not outward semblance of dramatic incident
-or thrilling episode and yet, as he modestly says, “the courage that
-could risk betrayal and the bravery which was ready to encounter death,
-if need be, in pursuit of freedom, were features in the undertaking. My
-success was due to address rather than to courage, to good luck rather
-than bravery. My means of escape were provided by the very means which
-were making laws to hold and bind me more securely to slavery.”
-
-By the laws of the state of Maryland, every free colored person was
-required to have what were called “free papers” which must be renewed
-frequently, and, of course, a fee was always charged for renewal. They
-contained a full and minute description of the holder, for the purpose
-of identification. This device, in some measure, defeated itself, since
-more than one man could be found to answer the general description;
-hence many slaves could get away by impersonating the real owners of
-these passes, which were returned by mail after the borrowers had made
-good their escape. To use these papers in this manner was hazardous both
-for the fugitives and for the lenders. Not every freeman was willing to
-put in jeopardy his own liberty that another might be free. It was,
-however, often done and the confidence that it necessitated was seldom
-betrayed. Douglass had not many friends among the free colored people in
-Baltimore who resembled him sufficiently to make it safe for him to use
-their papers. Fortunately, however, he had one who owned a “sailor’s
-protection,” a document describing the holder and certifying to the fact
-that he was a “free American sailor.” This “protection” did not describe
-its bearer very accurately. But, it called for a man very much darker
-than himself, and a close examination would have betrayed him at the
-start. In the face of all these conditions young Douglass was relying
-upon something beside a dubious written passport. This something was his
-desperate courage. He had learned to act the part of a freeman so well
-that no one suspected him of being a slave. He had early acquired the
-habit of studying human nature. As he grew to understand men, he no
-longer dreaded them. No one knew better than he the kind of human nature
-that he had to deal with in this perilous undertaking. He knew the
-speech, manner, and behavior that would excite suspicion; hence he
-avoided asking for a ticket at the railway station because this would
-subject him to examination. He so managed that just as the train started
-he jumped on, his bag being thrown after him by some one in waiting. He
-knew that scrutiny of him in a crowded car _en route_ would be less
-exacting than at the station. He had borrowed a sailor’s shirt,
-tarpaulin, cap and black cravat, tied in true sailor fashion, and he
-acted the part of an “old salt” so perfectly that he excited no
-suspicion. When the conductor came to collect his fare and inspected his
-“free papers,” Douglass, in the most natural manner, said that he had
-none but promptly showed his “sailor’s protection,” which the railway
-official merely glanced at and passed on without further question. Twice
-on the trip he thought he was detected. Once when his car stood opposite
-a south-bound train, Douglass observed a well-known citizen of Baltimore
-who knew him well, sitting where he could see him distinctly. At another
-time, while still in Maryland, he was noticed by a man who had met him
-frequently at the ship-yards. In neither of these cases, however, was he
-interfered with or molested. When he got into the free state of
-Pennsylvania, he felt more joy than he dared express. He had by his cool
-temerity and address passed every sentinel undetected and no slave, to
-his knowledge, he afterward said, ever got away from bondage on so
-narrow a margin of safety.
-
-After reaching Philadelphia, he hurried on to New York. It took him just
-twenty-four hours to make the run from the slave city of Baltimore to
-the free city of New York. Measured by his intense anxiety, the distance
-and time must have seemed without end. For fifteen years he had been
-patiently planning to get his feet upon free soil and breathe the air of
-a free state. No one ever did more to free himself or to deserve the
-liberty into which he was now about to enter. He came to New York, his
-pulses throbbing with high hopes. He soon learned, however, that his
-stay there was not safe and that the slave-traders plied their vocation
-even in the free-states.
-
-Douglass’s instinct for right action seldom failed him. Although he was
-totally ignorant of New York and its people, and had never heard of a
-“Vigilance Committee,” he had managed, in a few days after his arrival,
-to put himself under the protection and guidance of such influential
-friends of the Negro race as Lewis and Arthur Tappan, Thomas Downing,
-and Theodore Wright, who were at that time high officials in that
-extensive Underground Railway system which had already safely carried
-thousands of passengers from bondage to freedom.
-
-He retained a keen remembrance of his former experiences in Baltimore
-and was conscious of a sense of protection in his Abolition friends; yet
-at the age of twenty-one years, in this new environment of freedom, he
-was in many respects as ignorant as a child. To what was north, or east,
-or west of New York, he was entirely oblivious neither did he know the
-kind and the condition of the people among whom he was to live and work
-out his destiny. Where to go, what to do, and how to use his freedom,
-were questions he could ask, but could not answer. It was enough, now,
-just to know that he was free. What was to be his relationship to these
-non-slave-holding people was yet to be discovered.
-
-It is an evidence of his self-reliance and honor, as well as his loyalty
-to his past, that, almost the first step in his new life, was to send
-for his promised wife. She came to New York at once, and they were
-wedded by Rev. J. W. C. Pennington, a Presbyterian minister of that
-city. The early marriage of the young man must be regarded as an
-important event in his career as a freeman. It was a marriage for love
-and, as his wife was a woman of strong character and determination, she
-was able actively to assist her husband while he was seeking to
-establish himself in a new country. The act also made him at once a
-home-builder and the head of a family. Though he was poor almost to the
-very limit of poverty, without work, without habitation, and without
-friends or relationships, having nothing, in fact, but himself, which
-included a sound body and strong will, he went about planning and doing
-things as if certain that all must come out as he wished.
-
-His newly discovered friends decided it was best for him not to stay
-longer in New York, and that New Bedford, Mass., was a much safer place.
-There he could work at his trade without danger of re-capture. He
-cheerfully started on his journey, though he had not enough money to pay
-his way. The stage-driver, plying between Newport and New Bedford, held
-a part of his baggage as security for his unpaid passage and when he and
-his wife arrived at their destination they had nothing to live on except
-faith. In this New England town everything was strange to Douglass, but
-he was not long in finding a friend, a colored man named Nathan Johnson.
-The latter, the first important acquaintance the refugee made among
-Northern colored people, had a good home, good standing in the
-community, and more than ordinary intelligence. He very soon discovered
-that Frederick Douglass was a man of superior fibre and became his firm
-friend.
-
-Johnson’s house was well furnished with books and music, and bore other
-evidences of good taste and a cultivated mind. He was in a position to
-render just that kind of help which the young fugitive and his new wife
-needed at this time. He at once redeemed the baggage held by the
-stage-driver, and gave Douglass needed directions and advice as to how
-to get work and to establish himself.
-
-Nathan Johnson had the further distinction of being the man who gave to
-the Maryland slave the name he ever afterward bore. Douglass left the
-South as Frederick Augustus Washington Bailey. His new-found friend had
-just been reading Scott’s _Lady of the Lake_, and persuaded the young
-man that Douglas was a name of poetic and historical significance; he
-was sure it would be further glorified by its new owner. With so
-auspicious a beginning, the refugee started out bravely to seek work and
-make a living for himself and his wife.
-
-As he moved about in the New England town, he was much impressed by
-Northern civilization, and was greatly surprised to see white people,
-who while rich, educated, and powerful, were yet not slave-holders. Up
-to this time he had known but two classes of white people, slave-holders
-and non-slave-holders. The non-slave-holding white people of the South,
-he knew, were generally ignorant, despised, and poor; while those who
-owned slaves seemed to own everything else worth having. Here in New
-England he observed that white people were high or low according to
-their character, ability, and possessions. Life appeared to him larger,
-wider, and fuller of possibilities than he had dreamed, even in his more
-hopeful days down on the Eastern Shore. These impressions and the better
-understanding of his own condition gave him courage and made him feel
-equal to any task or problem. His first occupation, as a free man, was
-putting away some coal for Ephraim Peabody, for which he was paid two
-dollars. He cherished this “free money,” for it was the first he had
-ever earned that he could call his own. He cheerfully went from one job
-to another, proud as a bank president in the new dignity which freedom
-seemed to have conferred upon him. He accepted any kind of task he could
-find to do, such as sawing wood, digging cellars, removing rubbish,
-helping to load cargoes on ships, scrubbing out ship cabins, and the
-rough work in a foundry. The employment was hard and the pay small, yet
-it did not seem so to this newly emancipated slave. The right to dispose
-of his own labor, and to have and to hold all that he made was a
-profound and unceasing satisfaction to him.
-
-His spare moments were given to studying and reading everything he could
-lay hold of. He saw from the first that his freedom could not be
-profitably used and protected without knowledge and the mental
-discipline that comes with the effort to acquire it. He was liked by
-everybody who employed him, because he made it a matter of principle to
-do all and more than his full duty in every occupation. He put as much
-zeal, intelligence, and cheerful industry into these common tasks as he
-later gave to pursuits of a more dignified character.
-
-Young Douglass was cheered and heartened in this wholesome atmosphere of
-freedom,—free schools, free labor, and general fair play, to such a
-degree that it was a long time before he began to feel the presence and
-trammels of race prejudice as they existed in New Bedford and elsewhere
-in the North in that day. That there was a feeling against his color he
-learned when he attempted to follow his trade as a calker. When he
-sought to hire himself to a certain ship-owner at New Bedford, he was
-told to go to work, but when he went to the boat with his tools, the
-foreman informed him that every white man would quit if he struck a blow
-at his trade. This unexpected _dénouement_ drove Douglass back to common
-labor, at which he could earn less than one-half of what he could have
-made as a calker. He accepted the situation in good spirit, however,
-feeling that the worst possible treatment in freedom was infinitely
-better than slavery.
-
-He met his next rebuff when he attempted to attend one of the lectures
-under the auspices of the New Bedford Lyceum Association. He was refused
-a ticket on the ground that it was against the policy of the society to
-admit colored people to the lecture-room. It was not long, however,
-before this discrimination was done away with, since men like Charles
-Sumner, Emerson, Horace Mann, and Garrison, refused to speak before the
-organization unless the restriction was removed. The privilege of
-attending these meetings and hearing some of the great anti-slavery
-leaders was a matter of great import to Douglass. Indeed, it was the
-very thing he needed as a part of his education in preparation for his
-life work. He heard for the first time white men who were taking strong
-positions on the question of the abolition of slavery. The existence of
-an anti-slavery society and an anti-slavery movement of ever-widening
-extent and influence in the nation impressed him as nothing had done
-since he came from the South. The things for which he had secretly
-dreamed and yearned and struggled in Maryland were now becoming great
-national issues, with men of might behind them, pushing them on and
-seeking to make them the foremost questions of the day.
-
-Quite as important as the privilege of hearing slavery discussed was the
-chance he obtained of reading William Lloyd Garrison’s paper, _The
-Liberator_. Garrison’s direct and uncompromising words came to him like
-a trumpet call. He began to cherish each number as second only in
-importance to the Bible. Heretofore he had had no one to help him reason
-out the philosophy of the question. What the facts of slavery were he
-knew by actual and bitter suffering. The words of no one could make him
-feel their injustice and pain more than his own experiences had made him
-feel them, but here, behold, was a mighty man, a prophet in his moral
-earnestness—a sort of Isaiah, who with inspired fervor, predicted the
-ultimate downfall of slavery.
-
-_The Liberator_ and Mr. Garrison’s words were as important to young
-Douglass and his intellectual development as was the _Columbian Orator_,
-which had inspired him while a slave in Baltimore. Those who knew him at
-once recognized his intelligence. The colored people of New Bedford were
-the first to discover his fluency as a speaker and to give ear to his
-original ideas on the question of freedom for their race. He was often
-called upon to speak in meetings held by colored men in the town, and in
-colored churches. As far as the masses of the people were concerned,
-however, he was still an obscure Negro laborer. There was no one except,
-perhaps, Nathan Johnson, who saw in this patient and cheerful toiler the
-promise of a public career. No men of African descent had up to this
-time achieved anything like distinction. A colored man might now and
-then be smart as a freak of nature; no one was prepared to think of his
-becoming great by sheer force of mind and character. But the power
-within this young fugitive slave and the forces without him were fast
-shaping themselves to call him forth and hold him up as an example to
-all the world.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
- BEGINNING OF HIS PUBLIC CAREER
-
-
-Years had passed and great changes had taken place since Uncle Lawson,
-the old colored preacher, who had been Frederick Douglass’s first
-spiritual teacher and comforter, had solemnly told him that “the Lord
-had a great work for him to do,” and that he must prepare to do it.
-These words were spoken at a time when the boy was just beginning to
-awaken to the vast possibilities of human life, and, dimly conscious of
-his own powers, was groping to find his place in the world. Douglass had
-never forgotten this speech. It seemed now that the prophecy of the old
-colored man was to be fulfilled. During the first years at New Bedford,
-he had been industriously preparing himself to perform the task that
-destiny apparently had assigned him. He had no teachers to help him in
-his studies, or direct him in his reading. He had no definite notion of
-what the future had in store for him, nor of how he was to be used “to
-perform the great work,” of which Uncle Lawson had spoken. The latter
-believed that his young _protégé_ was to become a preacher of the
-Gospel, because that seemed the only possible future of the slave upon
-whom unusual gifts had been bestowed. But Douglass had reached the
-conclusion that, if any great work had been assigned him, it was in the
-direction of securing the freedom of the members of his race in bonds.
-He was faithfully preparing himself to meet the emergency that should
-call him into the service of that cause.
-
-In the summer of 1841, the opportunity, long waited for, came. A great
-anti-slavery convention was called by William Lloyd Garrison and his
-friends, to meet at Nantucket. We have already seen how deeply young
-Douglass was impressed with Mr. Garrison’s writings in _The Liberator_,
-and it can be easily inferred that the word “anti-slavery” should have
-stirred him as no other word in the language of freedom. For the first
-time since he came to New Bedford he determined to take a holiday for
-the purpose of going to Nantucket and becoming as much as possible a
-part of the anti-slavery meeting. However ardent others might be in
-their interest for the convention, to him it meant everything worth
-living for and dying for to find the white people in a free community
-taking hold of the question of abolition as if their own kith and kin
-were in chains.
-
-Douglass went to see, listen, and learn. This was privilege enough for
-one occasion. When he was sought out by a citizen of New Bedford, who
-had heard of him, and was asked to say a few words, he was quite
-startled. So frightened was he, “it was with much difficulty,” he says,
-“that I could stand erect or could command or articulate two words
-without hesitation and stammering. I trembled in every limb. I am not
-sure that my embarrassment was not the most important part of my speech,
-if speech it could be called. The audience sympathized with me and at
-once, from having been remarkably silent, it became much excited.”
-
-But his embarrassment soon subsided. Parker Pillsbury, an eye-witness,
-says: “When the young man, Douglass, closed late in the evening, none
-seemed to know or care for the lateness of the hour. The crowded
-congregation had been wrought up almost to enchantment as he turned over
-the terrible apocalypse of his experience in slavery.”
-
-If Abolition was a great cause in the minds of those astonished
-auditors, it became more sincerely so after the young fugitive from
-bondage had concluded. William Lloyd Garrison followed, and of him
-Pillsbury says: “I think that Mr. Garrison never before, nor afterward
-felt more profoundly the sacredness of his mission. I surely never saw
-him more deeply and divinely inspired. He said among other things, ‘Have
-we been listening to a thing—a piece of property, or a man?’ ‘A man,’
-shouted the audience. ‘And should such a man be held a slave in a
-republican and Christian land?’ ‘No, no. Never, never!’ was the fervent
-response. ‘Shall such a man be sent back to slavery from the soil of old
-Massachusetts?’ Almost the whole assembly sprang with one accord to
-their feet and shouted, ‘No, no!’ long and loud.”
-
-Measured by its effect on the audience and by its importance to himself
-and the Abolition cause, this first speech was one of the greatest Mr.
-Douglass ever made. Only three years out of bondage, never having been
-at school, wholly self-taught and coming direct from hard toil to a
-platform, he had been invited to speak before an audience of proud and
-cultured New Englanders!
-
-The whole thing seemed so incredible and was so unexpected that those
-who heard him never ceased to wonder how such wisdom and eloquence could
-come from a slave. It was by far the most dramatic and important
-incident that had occurred in the anti-slavery fight up to this time.
-
-William Lloyd Garrison was quick to discern that the cause needed this
-fugitive slave, more than any other man or thing, as an argument and an
-illustration in the further work of the anti-slavery society. Others
-spoke from knowledge and conviction gained by reading and study;
-Douglass spoke from twenty years’ experience of all the phases of
-slave-life. His words had the charm born of things seen, felt, and
-suffered. His presentation of the subject was more than argument; it was
-a transcript from actual life.
-
-Immediately after the convention, John A. Collins, then the general
-agent of the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society, went to Mr. Douglass
-and urged him to accept a position as one of his assistants, publicly to
-advocate its principles. This unexpected offer was quite as embarrassing
-as was the request for him to speak at the meeting. Acting upon an
-impulse of self-mistrust, and a sense of unfitness, he tried to refuse,
-but all excuses were swept aside by Mr. Collins, and finally Douglass
-decided to make a trial for three months.
-
-After recovering from his first timidity, he entered the fight with
-enthusiasm. No one was more surprised than he at his ability to meet the
-expectations of the people. In the early part of his work he was
-accompanied by George Foster. They traveled and lectured from the same
-platform through the eastern counties of Massachusetts. He was
-frequently introduced to the audiences as a “chattel,” a “thing,” a
-“piece of property,” and Mr. Collins invariably called their attention
-to the fact that the speaker was a “graduate from an institution whose
-diploma was written upon his back.”
-
-A great deal of interest was excited in the meetings that he was invited
-to address. Many of those who came out of curiosity to see and hear a
-fugitive slave went away convinced and converted to the anti-slavery
-cause. Douglass soon persuaded his friends and associates to think that
-he was too much of a man to be employed as a mere “exhibit.” At first
-his eloquence and success with the public both delighted and alarmed
-them. There began to arise a fear that his power as an orator would
-prove too great. It seemed well enough for him to tell the story of his
-servitude, but when he indulged in logic and flights of fancy and
-invective, it was feared that he would be considered an impostor. If
-slavery was such a degrading thing as this man said it was, the question
-naturally arose, How, then, did he acquire his accomplishments? Besides,
-Douglass did not give the name of his master, or the state from which he
-came.
-
-All this was true enough, and the truth was somewhat embarrassing, but
-the people did not stop to consider the omission. Douglass was now a
-resident of Massachusetts; he was a slave, owned in Maryland. To state
-the facts about his identity would be to invite slave-catchers to New
-Bedford to reclaim strayed property. There was nothing for him to do but
-to keep the dangerous secret securely locked in his own bosom and talk
-down the doubts and suspicions that were now and then expressed. George
-Foster, Mr. Garrison, Mr. Collins, and other friends, who happened to be
-on the same platform with him, were always admonishing him not to appear
-too intelligent, too oratorical, or too logical, lest his claim of
-having been a slave be discredited. “Give the facts,” they said, “and we
-will take care of the philosophy.” “Let us have the facts only.” “Tell
-your story, Frederick; people will not believe you were ever a slave, if
-you go on in this way.” “Be yourself.” “Better have a little plantation
-dialect than not.” “It is not best that you should seem so learned.”
-
-Such were the complaints and warnings that came to him from those who
-most admired him, during the first few months of his career as an
-orator. The young man could scarcely curb his impatience, so great was
-his moral earnestness. The thoughts which he uttered flowed so
-spontaneously and uncontrollably from his lips, that it seemed to him he
-could no more limit himself than he could stop the force of gravitation.
-Speaking of this embarrassment he says: “It was impossible for me to
-repeat the same old story month after month and keep up my interest in
-it. I could not follow the injunction of my friends, for I was now
-reading and thinking. New views of the subject were being presented to
-my mind: I could not always curb my moral indignation.”
-
-In order to remove all doubts as to whether he was a slave, he put the
-facts, including the name of his master, in the possession of the
-Anti-Slavery Society. As soon as Phillips and Garrison knew the truth,
-they advised him to go on as before, for if he gave his name and that of
-his master, he would be in danger of re-capture,—even in Massachusetts.
-When he showed to Wendell Phillips a manuscript detailing the facts of
-his slave-life, he was advised “to throw it in the fire”; but so
-straightforward and earnest and effective was his work, and so rapid his
-development as an orator, that he soon overcame all doubts, and those
-who had once urged him to curb his intellectual flights learned to
-admire his courage, and to put a higher value on his services to the
-cause of Abolition. Whenever there was serious work to be done, and the
-best men and women were needed to combat pro-slavery policies and
-measures, he was eagerly sought. His name now began to be announced with
-those of the foremost advocates of freedom.
-
-In the latter part of the year 1841, and in the early months of 1842,
-the Abolitionists were called upon for a show of strength. The appeal
-came from Rhode Island. The people of that state were aroused to a high
-pitch of interest in an effort to adopt a new constitution in place of
-the old colonial charter that had been in use since the Revolution.
-Making a new constitution was a political question and every political
-contest, however local in concern, afforded occasion for the pro-slavery
-and anti-slavery people to clash. In this Rhode Island contest, interest
-centred on the proposition to restrict the right of suffrage to white
-citizens only. The pro-slavery sentiment of this, as of other Northern
-states, was so strong, that there seemed to be a great likelihood of the
-“color line” being fixed in the supreme law of the commonwealth. To
-combat this danger, the anti-slavery societies massed their forces and
-went into the little state to dispute every inch of the ground. Stephen
-S. Foster, Parker Pillsbury, Abby Kelley, James Monroe, and Frederick
-Douglass were the advance guard. The contest here was somewhat different
-from the more or less peaceful work of holding public meetings in
-Massachusetts to create public opinion. Here was a clean-cut issue in
-which was involved the right of free Negroes to be full citizens in a
-Northern state. Under the leadership of Thomas W. Dorr, the pro-slavery
-forces had to be opposed by strong arguments and not by mere sentiment.
-There was also a decided feeling against “intermeddlers,” as Douglass
-and his associates were called. Meetings were held all over the state,
-and soon it was plain to be seen that the anti-slavery people were
-making progress in overcoming the “Dorrites.” It was a picturesque and
-dramatic campaign, the chief features of which were the conspicuous
-parts taken by Frederick Douglass, the fugitive slave, and Abby Kelley.
-Mr. Douglass says that she “was perhaps the most successful of any of
-us. Her youth and simple Quaker beauty, combined with her wonderful
-earnestness, her large knowledge and great logical powers bore down all
-opposition to the end, wherever she spoke, though she was before pelted
-with foul eggs, and no less foul words, from the noisy mobs which
-attended us.”
-
-Mr. Douglass speaks in generous praise of the effectiveness of other
-anti-slavery advocates, who were associated with him in this campaign.
-He himself made a multitude of friends and added immensely to his
-prestige as an orator. He was received by many of the leading citizens
-of the state, almost as a brother. Among these new friends he gratefully
-mentions the Clarks, Keltons, Chases, Adamses, Greens, Eldridges,
-Mitchells, Anthonys, Goulds, Fairbanks, and many others.
-
-Yet it was not all smooth sailing for the colored orator. He was
-frequently dragged from the cars by mobs, though his associates were
-always loyal to him, many of them refusing to go where he could not.
-This was especially the case with Wendell Phillips, James Monroe, and
-William A. White.
-
-The result of the battle in Rhode Island was a complete triumph over
-those who had sought to abridge the suffrage. The victory was not only
-important, as a show of strength of the Abolitionists, but it prevented
-the establishment of a dangerous precedent which might have had its
-influence upon other states.
-
-From Rhode Island, Mr. Douglass was called to speak in various places.
-At first he was not always well received, but in nearly every case,
-after he had once appeared, converts were made and opposition ceased. At
-one time when he, with Garrison, Abby Kelley, and Foster, attempted to
-speak in Hartford, Conn., the doors of every hall and church were closed
-against them, but they spoke under the open sky, to so much effect that
-some of their opponents had the grace to confess to a sense of shame for
-such action.
-
-At Grafton, Mass., Douglass was advertised to speak alone. There was no
-house, church, or market-place in which he was permitted to appear. Not
-to be outdone, he went up and down the streets ringing a dinner-bell
-that he had borrowed, announcing that “Frederick Douglass, recently a
-slave, will lecture on Grafton Common this evening at seven o’clock.” As
-a result of this notice, he spoke to a great concourse of people, and as
-usual advanced the cause of Abolition.
-
-In the year 1843, the movement had so far progressed that a great
-undertaking was announced. It was proposed to hold one hundred
-conventions under the auspices of the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society
-in such states as New Hampshire, Vermont, New York, Ohio, Indiana, and
-Pennsylvania. Mr. Douglass was selected as one of the agents to assist
-in the work. This was regarded as an ambitious scheme on the part of Mr.
-Garrison, and attracted a great deal of public attention. Among the
-speakers associated with Mr. Douglass in this tour were George Bradburn,
-John A. Collins, James Monroe, Sidney Howard Gay, and Charles Lennox
-Remond, the last-named a colored man of unusual eloquence.
-
-Mr. Douglass felt very proud, as well he might, of being given so
-prominent a part in this important enterprise, and of being associated
-with men of such distinction. The wisdom of holding these conventions
-was soon made manifest, when it was discovered how ill-informed were the
-masses of the people as to the nature of the issue the Abolitionists
-were seeking to force upon the attention of the country.
-
-The crusade received rather a chilly reception in the Green Mountain
-State. Along the Erie Canal, from Albany to Buffalo, it was more than
-difficult to excite any interest or to make converts. In Syracuse, the
-home of Rev. Samuel J. May, and where such men as Gerrit Smith, Beriah
-Green, and William Goodell lived, Douglass and his friends could not
-obtain a hall, church, or market-place to hold a meeting. Everybody was
-discouraged and favored “shaking the dust from off their feet,” and
-going to other parts. But Frederick Douglass did not believe in
-surrender. He was determined to speak his word for the gospel of
-Abolition here, even if he must do so under the open sky, as in
-Connecticut and Massachusetts. In the morning he began in a grove with
-five people present. So powerful was his appeal that in the afternoon he
-had an audience of five hundred and in the evening he was tendered the
-use of an old building that had done service as a Congregational church.
-In this house the convention was organized and carried on for three
-days. The seeds of Abolition were so well sown in Syracuse, that
-thereafter it was always hospitable ground for anti-slavery advocates.
-Mr. Douglass had a more friendly reception in Rochester, which was to be
-his future home. Here he found a goodly number of Abolitionists and his
-words made a lasting impression.
-
-The next meeting of importance was in Buffalo. The outlook for a
-convention in this western New York city was so discouraging that Mr.
-Douglass’s associates turned on their heels and left him to “do Buffalo
-alone.” The place appointed was a dilapidated old room that had once
-been used as a post-office. No one was there at first except a few
-hack-drivers who sauntered in from curiosity. But Mr. Douglass went at
-them with great earnestness, as if they could settle all the problems
-that were overburdening his heart. Out of this small and unsympathetic
-beginning, grew a great convention. Every day for nearly a week, in the
-old building, he spoke to constantly increasing crowds of people who
-were worth talking to, until finally a large Baptist church was thrown
-open to him. Here the size and character of the audience were
-flattering. So great was the eagerness to hear him that on Sunday
-evening he addressed an outdoor meeting of five thousand people in the
-park.
-
-At this Buffalo meeting Mr. Douglass called to his assistance a number
-of prominent colored speakers, such as Henry Highland Garnet, Theodore
-S. Wright, Amos G. Bearman, Charles M. Ray, and Charles Lennox Remond,
-all of powerful speech and growing influence, who held a convention of
-their own, at which the ex-slave made an eloquent address.
-
-From this city Douglass continued on his way into Ohio and Indiana. The
-Ohio meeting, held in Clinton County, was a notable event. This was the
-farthest west Mr. Douglass had been as yet and he now went into the
-state of Indiana. This was dangerous ground, as he soon learned when he
-attempted to deliver his message. Here he found a mob-spirit harder to
-resist than any he had encountered in the East. In attempting to speak
-at Richmond, Ind., where Henry Clay had been heard shortly before, he
-received a shower of “evil-smelling eggs.” From this place he went to
-Pendleton, where he could find no hall or church in which to speak; but,
-not to be outdone, he attempted what he had successfully accomplished at
-Syracuse, and at other places. He had a platform erected in the woods. A
-large assembly of people came out to hear the colored orator, but the
-Hoosiers, in this part of the state, were determined not to be
-persuaded.
-
-It was, as one of them rudely expressed it, a case of “no nigger speaker
-for us.” As soon as the meeting began, a mob of fifty or sixty
-rough-looking men ordered Douglass to stop. An attempt to disregard this
-threatening command, maddened the rioters. They tore down the platform
-and violently assaulted the orator and his associate, Mr. White. Seeing
-the danger, Douglass began to fight his way through the crowd with a
-club. The sight of a weapon in the hands of a Negro angered the mob
-still more, and they set upon him with such fury that he was felled to
-the ground, being beaten so fiercely that he was left for dead. Having
-dispersed the meeting, the men mounted their horses and rode away. Mr.
-Douglass’s right hand was broken, and he was in a state of
-unconsciousness for some time. He was unable to speak for several days,
-being tenderly cared for by a Mrs. Neal Hardy, a member of the Society
-of Friends, until his wounds were healed, but he never recovered the
-full use of his right hand.
-
-Notwithstanding this rough treatment, Mr. Douglass would not allow
-himself to be frightened out of the state. He continued his work for a
-long time, and compelled a respectful and peaceful hearing. He was no
-coward and was not afraid of mobs. He did not stop until, according to
-the plans determined upon by the Anti-Slavery Society of Massachusetts,
-the one hundred conventions had been held. The work was accomplished, in
-spite of indifference, contemptuous criticism, and sometimes violent and
-bloody opposition.
-
-Although it seemed at the time that not much had been achieved, the seed
-sown was to bear fruit when a few years later the South and North were
-arrayed against each other in the great struggle for the preservation of
-the Union.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V
- SLAVERY AND ANTI-SLAVERY
-
-
-Frederick Douglass was so much a part of the Abolition movement from
-1838 to the final overthrow of slavery in the United States, that his
-career will be the better understood after a brief review of the
-condition of the country as affected by the evil during those years.
-
-At the time of Douglass’s escape from bondage in 1838, slavery was the
-one great and overshadowing fact in our national life. According to the
-census of 1840, the number of slaves in the United States was about
-2,500,000 and the number of free colored people about 300,000. The value
-of slave-property was upward of two billions of dollars. No other
-interest in the United States at that time approximated in the amount of
-its invested capital the sum represented in these human chattels. The
-labor of these slaves was to a very considerable extent the basis of
-American commerce and credit. Not the South alone, but the entire
-nation, was interested directly or indirectly, in preserving the
-integrity and maintaining the economic value of slave-labor. The mining,
-the manufacturing, and the great grain interests of the present time
-were unknown and scarcely dreamed of in those early days of the nation’s
-industries. Cotton was “king,” and its dominion affected in some way,
-and to some degree, the social, political, and economic life of the
-republic.
-
-The results of Whitney’s invention of the cotton gin were such as to
-check the current of sentiment in favor of emancipation, which had found
-expression in the sayings of Thomas Jefferson, Madison, and other
-Revolutionary leaders. In his great speech of March 7, 1850, Daniel
-Webster said: “In 1791 the first parcel of cotton of the growth of the
-United States was exported and amounted to 19,200 pounds. It has gone on
-increasing rapidly until the whole crop may now, perhaps, in a season of
-great product and great prices, amount to $100,000,000.” According to
-the estimates of the United States Census Bureau in its census of 1900,
-cotton production increased from 2,000,025 pounds in 1790 to 987,637,200
-pounds in 1849, and 2,397,238,140 pounds in 1859. The enormous capital
-invested in this industry created a close community of interest between
-the planters of the South and the capitalists of the North; hence the
-influence of the cotton trade was felt in both sections.
-
-This enormous interest easily dominated the politics of the times, North
-and South. The most prominent statesmen of the nation, after 1850, were
-either openly committed to policies and measures to protect and extend
-the power of slavery, or were silent, since to oppose these policies and
-measures meant, in many instances, political extinction. The trend of
-all legislation in our national government at this period was directly
-opposed to emancipation. Meanwhile, the evil flourished and became more
-and more a part of the spirit and blood of our national life. If there
-were no slavery in the Northern states, one reason was that slave-labor
-had proven unprofitable. In the early days of the institution, the North
-was quite as willing to legalize and protect slavery as the South, and
-continued to do so as long as it paid and was practicable. The mere fact
-that slavery was profitable where climatic conditions were congenial to
-cotton raising, increased the demand for both slaves and territory. The
-pressure for more slaves and more territory for slavery, was so
-persistent, that it constantly became easier to ignore moral and
-religious precepts, to set aside the national maxims, and to override
-the laws that stood in the way of its extension and power. For example,
-the slave-trade was prohibited by national law, yet so little effort was
-made to enforce this law, that importations kept the market well
-supplied. The acts of Congress, the messages of our presidents, the
-utterances of our cabinet ministers, and correspondence with the
-representatives of the nation at foreign courts, contain abundant
-evidences of the constant concern of our government that nothing should
-be done to impair the security of slave-property in the United States.
-The acts of Congress by which every addition to our national domain
-south of the Ohio River became slave-territory, clearly show this. When
-in 1855, a “slaver” was driven by storm to seek refuge in Bermuda, our
-Minister at the Court of St. James was instructed that, “in the present
-state of diplomatic relations with the government of his British
-Majesty, the most immediately pressing of the matters with which the
-United States Legation at London is now charged, is the claim of certain
-American citizens against Great Britain, for a number of slaves wrecked
-on the island in the Atlantic.” The message contains a polite hint that
-“neglect to satisfy these demands might possibly tend to disturb and
-weaken the kind and amicable relations that now so happily subsist
-between the two countries.”
-
-By sanction of the national government, slavery was legalized and
-protected at the national capital. The war with Mexico, which resulted
-in the annexation of Texas, was followed by the establishment of slavery
-in the territory so acquired. It was fostered and defended as a national
-institution not only by numerous acts of the government, but by public
-sentiment in the Northern states. It had existed before the foundation
-of the Union. It had been accepted as a fact by the framers of the
-Constitution. As such, it had a legitimate claim, it was urged, to the
-protection of the government. It was generally assumed that, on the
-whole, the Negro was better off in slavery than as a free man. Though
-the Northern people did not favor the extension of slavery, they were
-disposed to meet in a spirit of conciliation every demand for more
-protection, more power, and more territory for this traffic.
-
-When opposition, not on grounds of expediency but of fundamental right,
-began to manifest itself in Northern states by the circulation of
-Abolition papers, the alarm of slave-owners was expressed in no
-uncertain tones. Some of the governors of slave-states and their
-legislatures made urgent demands that such publications be suppressed.
-The following is a sample of some of the resolutions passed by the
-legislatures: “Resolved that our sister states are respectfully
-requested to enact penal laws prohibiting the printing, within their
-respective limits, of all such publications as may have a tendency to
-make our slaves discontented.”
-
-The messages of the governors of two Northern states, William L. Marcy
-of New York, and Edward Everett of Massachusetts, aptly illustrate
-sentiment in the North at this time. Governor Marcy said: “Without the
-power to pass such laws, the states would not possess all the necessary
-means for preserving their external relations of peace among
-themselves.” Governor Everett said: “Whatever by direct and necessary
-operation is calculated to excite an insurrection among slaves, has been
-held by highly respectable legal authority an offense against the peace
-of this commonwealth, which may be prosecuted as a misdemeanor at common
-law.”
-
-In the same year, 1836, the Rhode Island legislature reported on a bill
-in conformity with the demands of the slave-states. The significance of
-this action is that it was taken fully two months prior to the request
-of the Southern states. Thus it appears that the idea of the suppression
-of free speech and free publication against slavery was first broached
-in a Northern state.
-
-President Jackson, in his annual message to Congress, in 1835 suggested
-“the propriety of passing such laws as will prohibit, under severe
-penalties, the circulation in the Southern states, through the mail, of
-incendiary publications, intended to instigate the slaves to
-insurrection.”
-
-The Postmaster-General, a Northern man, serving under Jackson, refused
-to “sanction” or condemn the acts of certain postmasters in arresting
-the circulation of Abolition circulars, characterized as “incendiary
-matter.”
-
-The state of public feeling at this time fully justified the government
-and its officials in everything they did to protect slavery, since their
-action was sanctioned by a sentiment national in extent and character.
-Just how strong was this public opinion in the North may be further
-illustrated by the spirit of mob-violence that forms one of the darkest
-chapters in the struggle to make this country, in deed as well as in
-name, “the home of the free.” William Lloyd Garrison and Benjamin Lundy,
-were repeatedly assaulted while they were running a paper in Baltimore
-in 1827. The gentle and pious young Quakeress, Prudence Crandall, of
-Canterbury, Conn., was arrested and sent to jail for allowing colored
-children to attend her school. Her brother, Dr. Reuben Crandall, was
-arrested in the city of Washington, thrown into prison on August 11,
-1833, and held there for eight months on the charge of circulating
-incendiary publications with the intent of inciting slaves to
-insurrection. The only evidence against him was that he had in his trunk
-some anti-slavery circulars. He died from the effects of his
-imprisonment soon after his release.
-
-On the 4th day of July, 1834, an anti-slavery meeting in New York was
-made the occasion of a frightful riot. At Worcester, Mass., in 1835, an
-anti-slavery speaker, Rev. O. Scott, son of an ex-governor, was forcibly
-prevented from delivering a lecture, and his notes were torn up. On the
-same day at Canaan, N. H., an academy was demolished, for the reason
-that it was designed for the instruction of colored youth. At Boston, on
-October 21, 1835, a mob of “five thousand gentlemen” attacked the Boston
-Female Anti-Slavery Society and dispersed one of its meetings while its
-president was at prayers. At Syracuse, N. Y., in October, 1833, a crowd
-of “prominent” citizens broke up a meeting called by Gerrit Smith to
-form an anti-slavery society; and in December, 1836, an anti-slavery
-meeting at New Haven, Conn., was dispersed by students of Yale College.
-At Alton, Ill., on the 7th day of November, 1837, Rev. Elijah P. Lovejoy
-was shot and killed and his printing press destroyed by a mob. At
-Cincinnati, O., in 1836, and again in 1840, mobs of citizens demolished
-the printing press of the _Philanthropist_, owned by James G. Birney, an
-ex-slave-holder from Kentucky. Pennsylvania Hall, in Philadelphia, built
-for the free discussion of all questions interesting to the American
-people, was burned by a mob in May, 1838, because Abolitionists had been
-allowed to hold a meeting there.
-
-But what was perhaps the most heartless of all instances of violence
-occurred on the 1st of August, 1842, at Philadelphia. The colored people
-of that city had built a fine church and hall in which they were holding
-a temperance celebration on the day of the anniversary of British
-emancipation. A mob was formed which burned the building, demolished the
-homes of the participants, and in a most savage and brutal manner, beat
-and maltreated its innocent victims. This riot lasted two days and the
-city authorities offered but feeble protection.
-
-Many other incidents of violence directed against attempts to discuss
-the slavery question might be recited, but enough have been mentioned to
-indicate public feeling in almost every community in the
-non-slave-holding States. All these manifestations of opposition to
-anti-slavery agitation and action were at first and for a long time very
-generally sanctioned by the churches, the schools and colleges, and by
-the politicians of the free North. All the forces of conservatism in the
-country were, as might have been expected, in favor of preserving the
-_status quo_, and scarcely any cause in the whole history of our country
-has ever been so unpopular as this Abolition movement. It seemed that
-the slave-holders might rest perfectly secure in the assurance that
-their interests would be well guarded by their friends in the
-free-states, assisted by the natural inertia of the great mass of the
-Northern people, who were instinctively opposed to any sudden or violent
-change such as the agitation of the Abolitionists seemed to portend.
-
-The inherent weakness of slavery in this country appeared when the very
-laws that were passed to sustain and support it served merely to arouse
-the public to a real comprehension of its evils. Gradually it became
-clear to an ever-increasing number of citizens that it had no place in a
-republic. It was out of harmony with the doctrines and principles fought
-for in the Revolutionary War, and it did violence to the consciences of
-large numbers of men and women, North and South, who, uncontrolled by
-prejudice, were free to think and act for themselves. Thousands of
-Southern people who felt that slavery was a wrong, emancipated their
-slaves; others were moved to treat them with unusual kindness, and still
-others held them because they could not help themselves.
-
-Many influences were at work to arouse and quicken the moral sense of
-the public and to make it conscious of the issues involved in the
-question. Such agencies as the missionary movement, in its effort to
-“evangelize” the world; the work of the Bible, tract and educational
-societies, the religious awakening of the masses, in response to the
-appeals of such eloquent preachers as Beecher, Rice, and Summerfield;
-and the new interest in the former teachings of Hopkins and Edwards:—all
-these forces, along with the new enthusiasm for social and political
-reform, which found expression in the work of temperance and peace
-societies and the fight against the cruel treatment of the Indians,
-especially the Cherokees, aroused the people and prepared them to take
-part in the discussion of public questions, giving them a new sense of
-the significance and the responsibility of self-government. This revived
-public spirit was aided and advanced by the growing influence of the
-modern newspaper press, and of journals dealing with a variety of
-subjects other than politics. Each moral and social question came to
-have an organ to spread its views. Every one who had a gift for writing
-had the opportunity to impress his opinions upon the public, if he could
-but get hold of a press and printing outfit. A noted author of that
-period says: “No one can comprehend in their real and distinctive
-characteristics, the existing agitations of America, if he does not take
-into account the new power and changed direction of the public press
-constituting a new era in human history.”
-
-With these agencies for the education of the masses, there came into
-being the lecture platform. Any man or woman with a talent for fluent
-speech and a “cause,” was at liberty to take the rostrum and attempt to
-get a hearing. The same writer, above quoted, says: “The railway car of
-1838, and the electric telegraph ten years after, were scarcely greater
-innovations or greater curiosities than were the voluntary lectures,
-free public conventions, and the moral and religious weekly journals
-with their correspondence from 1825 to 1830.”
-
-The development of these moral and religious agencies furnished the
-masses of the American people with the means of creating a more active
-interest in public affairs. Out of these grew that broader knowledge and
-more acute moral sense which led them to inquire into the sanctions that
-seemed to hedge about and protect the institution of slavery.
-
-It was in such an atmosphere, in which religious enthusiasm touched and
-quickened the sense of responsibility of the people in social and
-political conditions, that the Abolition spirit grew and became a power
-in public affairs. The question of slavery was definitely put before the
-people as a political issue in the Missouri Compromise in 1820. During
-the debate that followed they heard for the first time, the doctrine of
-“immediate and unconditional emancipation of the slave.” Interest in
-this new and radical doctrine was immediate and wide-spread. To those
-who owned slaves, and indeed to the vast majority of the people, North
-and South, who accepted slavery as an established institution with a
-legitimate claim to protection from attack, this new doctrine seemed at
-once revolutionary and dangerous.
-
-The cry at once went up, “Put down the discussion and silence the
-agitation!” It was indeed a question that could not survive debate. As a
-matter of fact, the opposition which Abolition aroused was the one thing
-that insured its final triumph. Men felt instinctively—it was the
-republican habit of mind—that there must be something essentially
-unsound in a system that could not tolerate open and free discussion.
-Hence it was that every attempt to suppress the agitation defeated its
-own purposes. The characters who now began to push to the front in the
-ranks of the Abolitionists were men of stern American fibre. Facts,
-figures, and arguments began to pile up which showed that this country
-could not long exist “half-slave and half-free.” The terms “pro-slavery”
-and “anti-slavery” came into the vocabulary of political discussion
-during this new conflict. The breach between the forces represented by
-these names grew wider and wider as the strife continued. The very
-nature of the issue caused a degree of bitterness that has never before
-or since been equaled in political argument in the United States. There
-could be no such thing as compromise. A test of moral and physical
-strength was sooner or later inevitable.
-
-The issues of the contest may be summarized with advantage.
-
-
- PRO-SLAVERY
-
-The powers and privileges the conservative party sought to maintain and
-defend were:
-
-The unlimited authority of the master or owner of slaves.
-
-Abrogation of marriage and the family relation among slaves.
-
-The power to enforce labor without wages.
-
-Incapacity of the slaves to acquire and hold property.
-
-Incapacity to enjoy civil, domestic, and political rights.
-
-Incapacity to make contracts or bargains.
-
-The liability of the slave to be sold like other chattels, and separated
-from relatives.
-
-The authorized prosecution of the inter-state slave-trade.
-
-The power of the master to forbid education, and to permit religious
-gatherings at his own discretion.
-
-The power of the legislatures of slave-states to prohibit education of
-slaves by their masters.
-
-
- ANTI-SLAVERY
-
-The principles for which the Abolitionists contended were the following:
-
-All men are created equal and are endowed by their Creator with certain
-inalienable rights among which are life, liberty, and the pursuit of
-happiness.
-
-Slavery, or more properly, the practice of slave-holding, is a crime
-against human nature and a sin against God.
-
-Like all other sins, slavery should be abolished unconditionally,
-repented of, and abandoned. It is always safe to leave off doing wrong
-and never safe to continue in wrong-doing.
-
-It is the duty of all men to bear testimony against wrong-doing, and
-consequently to bear testimony against slave-holding.
-
-Immediate and unconditional emancipation, is preëminently safe and
-beneficial to all parties concerned.
-
-No compensation is due to the slave-holder for emancipating his slaves;
-and emancipation creates no necessity for such compensation because it
-is of itself a pecuniary benefit, not only to slaves, but to masters.
-
-There should be no compromise in legislation, jurisprudence, or the
-executive action of the government, any more than in the activities and
-responsibilities of private life.
-
-No wicked enactments can be morally binding. There are at the present
-time the highest obligations resting upon the people of the free-states
-to remove slavery, by moral and political action, as prescribed in the
-Constitution of the United States.[1]
-
-Footnote 1:
-
- See William Lloyd Garrison—“The Story of His Life Told by His
- Children,” vol. 1, p. 408, _et. seq._, where the full text of the
- Declaration of Sentiments of the Anti-Slavery Convention of 1833 is
- given.
-
-Societies were formed on all sides. On the 10th day of January, 1832,
-the New England Anti-Slavery Society was established in Boston. In 1833,
-another society was organized in New York City. A call was issued for a
-national anti-slavery convention, to be held in Philadelphia, December
-4th, 5th, and 6th, in 1833, for the purpose of forming a National
-Anti-Slavery Society. Upward of sixty delegates came to this meeting
-from Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island,
-Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Ohio. This was the
-beginning of the national anti-slavery movement. Arthur Tappan, a
-well-known merchant of New York City, was chosen president. Among the
-delegates in attendance were such distinguished men as John G. Whittier,
-the poet; Beriah Green, William Lloyd Garrison, Elizur Wright, A. L.
-Cox, and William Goodell. After this time anti-slavery societies were
-formed in every Northern state, men and women alike being eligible to
-membership.
-
-The Quaker element in this anti-slavery movement was strong and
-important. Benjamin Lundy was the pioneer Abolitionist and no single
-American ever did more for emancipation. In an appeal to the public in
-1830, he said: “In a period of ten years prior to 1830, I have
-sacrificed several thousand dollars of my own hard earnings; have
-traveled upward of five thousand miles on foot and more than twenty
-thousand miles in other ways; have visited nineteen states of this Union
-and held more than two hundred public meetings, and have performed two
-voyages to the West Indies, by which means the liberation of a
-considerable number of slaves has been effected.”
-
-The anti-slavery movement was a warfare, but its weapons were those of
-peace. Appeal to the people by public addresses and through the medium
-of the press, constituted the only method of fighting. Agitators in
-behalf of this cause flooded the country with facts, figures, and
-arguments. They brought the republic back to the principles of liberty
-and justice upon which it was founded. They urged this issue so
-persistently that no other question was permitted to equal it in public
-interest. They set out with the determination that there was to be no
-peace, no ease of conscience, no further prosperity, no national glory
-until this question of slavery was settled and settled right. As the
-subject grew in interest and importance, it attracted to itself some of
-the brightest minds of the country; men who afterward became
-distinguished as statesmen, poets, authors, orators. Even men of wealth,
-whose natural interest would have inclined them to aid in preserving
-existing conditions, joined the ranks. They gave to the movement a
-character for respectability and made it a power that must be reckoned
-with. The new party demanded a new dispensation, and with such
-persistency, upon grounds which appealed so directly to the fundamental
-political beliefs of the people, that finally there was not enough
-inertia in the nation to oppose its demands.
-
-While these revolutionary forces were gathering strength, the great mass
-of the Negro people in the United States were dumb. In the plantation
-states, the black man was a chattel; in the Northern states, he was a
-good deal of an outlaw.
-
-He was not permitted to share in the responsibilities and benefits of
-citizenship sufficiently to be able to make his abilities known and his
-purposes respected. “A man without force,” to use Mr. Douglass’s words,
-“is without the essential dignity of humanity. Human nature is so
-constituted that it cannot honor a helpless man, though it can pity him,
-and even this it cannot do long, if signs of power do not arise; you can
-put a man so far beneath the level of his kind that he loses all just
-ideals of his natural position.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI
- SEEKS REFUGE IN ENGLAND
-
-
-When Frederick Douglass had concluded his remarkable tour from Vermont
-to Indiana in the interest of the anti-slavery conventions, he was one
-of the most popular and widely talked of men on the American platform.
-The public everywhere was eager to learn everything possible about the
-“runaway slave” who was winning his place among the foremost of American
-orators. Interest in him was farther enhanced by the publication of his
-“Narrative,” in 1845. Its issue was made necessary by the demand for
-something definite concerning the antecedents of this “alleged slave.”
-His accomplishments as a speaker and as a reasoner seemed inconsistent
-with the representation made by him, that he had had no schooling, and
-that he had been a slave until he was twenty-one years of age. There was
-a desire for the exact facts. Yet to give them was dangerous. His
-growing popularity was likewise a peril. The possibility of his capture
-and return to slavery increased with his influence as an orator and
-agitator.
-
-After this publication, Douglass’s personal friends and the leaders of
-the anti-slavery cause became more and more apprehensive. It would have
-been regarded as little less than a calamity to have had Frederick
-Douglass, the incomparable orator, the man in whom almost for the first
-time, the silent, toiling slaves had found a voice, dragged back into
-bondage. Under the circumstances it was deemed expedient for him to go
-to England. Douglass himself was less anxious than his associates. He
-was willing to continue to run any risk, if thereby he might serve the
-cause of emancipation. His objections, however, were overruled, and he
-was obliged to depart. He sailed on the steamer _Cambria_ of the Cunard
-Line, Saturday, August 16, 1845, and James N. Buffum, of Lynn, Mass.,
-accompanied him.
-
-Though an English boat, Douglass was not allowed cabin accommodations
-upon it. This aroused the indignation of a large number of the
-passengers, among whom were many anti-slavery people,—notably the
-Hutchinson family, the sweet singers of the Abolition cause. Mr.
-Douglass by this time had become so used to such humiliations that he
-easily made himself at home in the steerage. Within a few days, however,
-he was the most popular person on the boat. Cabin passengers came into
-his dirty quarters to see and talk with him. And presently all
-restrictions were removed and he was welcomed and honored in every part
-of the great steamer. A short speech which he delivered _en route_
-aroused the resentment of some who were on the ship and a group of young
-men threatened to throw him overboard. It was only by the interference
-of the captain that Mr. Douglass was saved from violence. On reaching
-Liverpool Thursday, August 28, 1845, these young men attempted to
-forestall any possible influence he might try to exert, by the
-publication of statements derogatory to his character and standing; but
-such statements, instead of having the desired effect, served but to
-arouse great interest in him.
-
-In going to Great Britain, Mr. Douglass had no fixed plan or program. He
-was merely fleeing to a land of safety to escape capture and a return
-into slavery. He soon found, however, that he was almost as well-known
-in England, as he was in New England. The remarkable story of his life
-had been widely read by the British public, especially by those
-interested in the anti-slavery cause. They had just passed through an
-anti-slavery agitation which had resulted in emancipation in the West
-Indies. Many of the most distinguished men in public life in Great
-Britain were Abolitionists, and they took an active and eager interest
-in the question. All attention was now centred upon America, and the men
-and women there who were leaders in the Abolition movement, were
-well-known. Douglass found a hospitable public awaiting him. It was the
-time of the great political struggle for the repeal of the Corn Laws and
-the dissolution of the union between England and Ireland. Some of the
-greatest orators and statesmen in English history were on the stage of
-action at this period. The black leader was stirred and inspired by the
-debates in which such men as Cobden, Bright, Disraeli, Lord Brougham,
-Sir Robert Peel, Daniel O’Connell and Lord John Russell took part. He
-met all of them personally, was received cordially by them, and treated
-with much deference. He dined with Bright and O’Connell, and in Belfast
-was tendered a breakfast, at which a member of parliament presided.
-While in Edinburgh he was entertained by the eminent philosopher, George
-Combe. Thomas Clarkson, who had assisted in inaugurating the
-anti-slavery movement in England, and who was at that time the most
-distinguished Abolitionist in the world, was deeply affected by meeting
-Mr. Douglass, of whom he had heard much. Taking both of his hands he
-feelingly said: “God bless you, Frederick Douglass; I have given sixty
-years of my life to the emancipation of your people, and if I had sixty
-more, they should all be given in the same way.”
-
-Mr. Douglass cherished a peculiar liking for Daniel O’Connell at that
-time the incomparable orator and leader of the Irish people. He had a
-genuine and lovable personality and was a powerful advocate. He had an
-intense hatred for slavery, as for all forms of oppression and
-injustice. He introduced Mr. Douglass always as the “Black O’Connell.”
-His fondness for the “Maryland slave” made the latter’s tour through
-Ireland a continuous ovation. At Cork, a public breakfast was tendered
-him and the mayor presided at the first meeting he addressed. On October
-4th, Father Mathew devoted an evening to him and Mr. Buffum. The British
-and Foreign Anti-Slavery Society presented Douglass with a Bible
-splendidly bound in gold. In response to this gracious act, he made the
-following acknowledgment:
-
-“I accept thankfully this Bible, and while it shall have the best place
-in my home, I trust also to give its precepts a place in my heart.
-Twenty years ago while lying, not unlike a dog, at the feet of my
-mistress, I was roused from the sweet sleep of childhood to hear the
-narrative of Job. A few years afterward found me searching for the
-Scriptures in the muddy street gutters to rescue its pages from the
-filth. A few years later, I escaped from my chains; gained partial
-freedom, and became an advocate for the emancipation of my race. During
-this advocacy, a suspicion obtains that I am not what I profess to be,
-to silence which, it is necessary for me to write out my experiences in
-slavery and give the names of my enslavers. This endangers my liberty;
-persecuted, hunted and outraged in America, I have come to England, and
-behold the change. The chattel becomes a man. I breathe: I am free!
-Instead of culling the Scriptures from the mud, they come to me dressed
-in polished gold, as the free and unsolicited gift of devoted hearts.”
-
-Shortly after this happy occurrence, Douglass, with his associate, Mr.
-Buffum, left Ireland. He had spoken about fifty times to the people in
-various parts of the island. Everywhere he had made a deep impression
-and intensified the interest in the American struggle for emancipation.
-
-In carrying the campaign into Scotland, he met for the first time
-something in the nature of an opposition or pro-slavery sentiment.
-William Lloyd Garrison had already arrived there. It was during the
-great excitement, in consequence of the position taken by the “Free
-Church” of Scotland in accepting money from slave-holders to be used in
-spreading the Gospel. In the cities of Glasgow, Greenock, Edinburgh, and
-other places were seen such sensational placards, as, “Send Back the
-Money.” These posters fairly indicated the state of public feeling upon
-this subject, which was intensified by the presence of Frederick
-Douglass, J. N. Buffum, William Lloyd Garrison, and George Thompson, and
-by their terrible arraignment of slavery. At one of the great meetings
-held at Cannon Mills, Edinburgh, Mr. Douglass was a speaker. It seemed
-to be a test of strength between the friends and foes of the policy of
-the “Free Church.” Doctors Cunningham and Candlish, men powerful in
-influence, learning, and eloquence, championed the cause of the “Free
-Church.” Mr. Douglass’s part in the meeting, was, as usual, a striking
-one. His facts and figures and actual experiences as a slave, silenced
-all arguments of a mere academic sort.
-
-In one of his addresses in Scotland, when he was charged with being in
-the pay of some rival religious sect, he said: “I am not here alone: I
-have with me the learned, wise and revered heads of the church. But with
-or without their sanction, I should stand just where I do now,
-maintaining that man-stealing is incompatible with Christianity; that
-slave-holding and true religion are at war with each other, and that a
-Free Church should have no fellowship with a slave church. The Free
-Church, in vindicating their fellowship of slave-holders, have acted on
-a damning heresy that a man may be a Christian, whatever may be his
-practice, so his creed is right. It is this heresy that holds in chains
-three millions of men, women, and children in the United States.”
-
-Each of his Scotch addresses was of this uncompromising and stirring
-character. It was a matter of surprise and wonder to his associates to
-witness his resourcefulness and readiness to meet all arguments and to
-sweep aside all half-truths, uttered in behalf of slavery. Summing up
-his work in Scotland, one who had followed him and studied its effects,
-wrote: “He has divided the Free Church against itself on account of
-slavery. He has gained the admiration and esteem of all the friends of
-the slave in this country. He has always kept an open platform, yet none
-of the rabbis have been found gallant enough to break lance with him. He
-completely exposed their miserable attempts to reconcile slavery with
-Christianity.”
-
-While in England and Scotland a man named Thompson, who formerly lived
-in St. Michaels, and who pretended to have known Douglass on the
-Freeland and Covey plantations, published a letter that tended to
-discredit some of his assertions. The ex-slave met these charges in a
-straightforward manner, which must have left no doubt of his
-truthfulness. In his reply to the Thompson letter, he said: “You have
-completely tripped up the heels of your slave-holding friends and laid
-them flat at my feet. You have done a piece of anti-slavery work which
-no anti-slavery man could do again. If I could see you now, amid the
-free hills of Scotland, where the ancient ‘black Douglas’ once met his
-foes, I presume I might summon sufficient courage to look you in the
-face; and were you to attempt to make a slave of me, it is possible you
-might find me almost as disagreeable a subject as was the Douglas to
-whom I have just referred.”
-
-The several months spent by the traveler in England were filled with
-interesting incidents. His oratorical triumph was complete, and the
-attentions accorded him by many prominent people, unusually flattering.
-Indeed, it can be said that he was positively lionized in London, but he
-bore it with becoming dignity and the grace of a man born to high
-conditions.
-
-Perhaps special mention should be made of his address at the World’s
-Temperance Convention, held in Covent Garden, August 7, 1846. A large
-delegation from the United States was present and some prominent
-Americans were on the program. The meeting was an immense affair and, in
-point of interest, the number of delegates, and the countries
-represented, genuinely international in character. Mr. Douglass was
-asked to address the convention and his speech was looked forward to
-with great interest. He rather anticipated a sensational outcome of his
-attempt to make himself heard, because he was not called upon until the
-delegates had spoken, and what they had said furnished him with the very
-text that appealed most strongly to his convictions and feelings. As he
-rose, the convention was in a quiver of excitement, for it was the first
-time that this much-talked-of fugitive from slavery had had a chance to
-stand up in the presence of men and women representing all shades of
-party opinion, and say the word that concerned the destiny of himself
-and his people. He began:
-
- “Mr. Chairman, Ladies and Gentlemen—I am not a delegate to this
- convention. Those who would have been most likely to elect me as a
- delegate could not, because they are to-night held in abject slavery
- in the United States. Sir, I regret, that I cannot fully unite with
- the American delegates in their patriotic eulogies of America and
- American societies. I cannot do so for this good reason: there are at
- this moment three millions of the American population, by slavery and
- prejudice, placed entirely beyond the pale of American temperance
- societies. The three million slaves are completely excluded by
- slavery, and four hundred thousand free colored people are almost as
- completely excluded by an inveterate prejudice against them on account
- of their color. [Cries of “Shame! Shame!”]
-
- “I do not say these things to wound the feelings of the American
- delegates; I simply mention them in their presence and before this
- audience that, seeing how you regard this hatred and neglect of the
- colored people, they may be inclined, on their return home, to enlarge
- the field of their temperance operations and embrace within the scope
- of their influence my long-neglected race. [Great cheering, and some
- confusion on the platform.]
-
- “Sir, to give you some idea of the difficulties and obstacles in the
- way of the temperance reformation of the colored population of the
- United States, allow me to state a few facts. About the year 1840, a
- few intelligent, sober, and benevolent colored people of Philadelphia,
- being acquainted with the alarming ravages of intemperance among a
- numerous class of colored people in that city, and finding themselves
- neglected and excluded from white societies, organized societies among
- themselves, appointed committees, sent out agents, built temperance
- halls, and were earnestly and successfully rescuing many from the
- fangs of intemperance.
-
- “The cause went on nobly, until August 1, 1842, the day when England
- gave liberty to one hundred thousand souls in the West Indies. The
- colored temperance societies selected this day to march in procession
- through the city, in the hope that such a demonstration would have the
- effect of bringing others into their ranks. They formed their
- procession, unfolded their teetotal banners, and proceeded to the
- accomplishment of their purpose. It was a delightful sight. But, sir,
- they had not proceeded down two streets before they were brutally
- assailed by a ruthless mob; their ranks broken up; their persons
- beaten and pelted with stones and brickbats. One of their churches was
- burned to the ground, and their best temperance hall utterly
- demolished.” [“Shame! Shame! Shame!” from the audience and cries of
- “Sit down” from the Americans on the platform.]
-
-A tremendous commotion was caused by this speech. The American
-delegation was alarmed and indignant. One member wrote an account of the
-event for the New York _Evangelist_, from which the following extracts
-will serve to gauge the feeling:
-
- “They all advocated the same cause, showed a glorious union of thought
- and feeling, and the effect was constantly being raised—the moral
- scene was superb and glorious—when Frederick Douglass, the colored
- Abolitionist, agitator and ultraist, came to the platform and so spoke
- _á la mode_ as to ruin the influence almost of all that preceded! He
- lugged in anti-slavery or Abolition, no doubt prompted to it by some
- of the politic ones who used him to do what they would not themselves
- venture to do in person. He is supposed to have been well paid for
- this abomination.
-
- “What a perversion, an abuse, an iniquity against the law of
- reciprocal righteousness, to call thousands together and get them,
- some certain ones, to seem conspicuous and devoted for one sole and
- grand object, and then all at once, with obliquity, open an avalanche
- on them for some imputed evil or monstrosity, for which, whatever be
- the wound or injury inflicted, they were both too fatigued and hurried
- with surprise, and too straitened for time, to be properly prepared. I
- say it is a streak of meanness; it is abominable. On this occasion Mr.
- Douglass allowed himself to denounce America and all its temperance
- societies together as a grinding community of the enemies of his
- people; said evil with no alloy of good concerning the whole of us;
- was perfectly indiscriminate in his severities; talked of the American
- delegates and to them as if he had been our schoolmaster, and we his
- docile and devoted pupils; and launched his revengeful missiles at our
- country without one palliative word, and as if not a Christian or a
- true anti-slavery man lived in the whole United States.
-
- “We all wanted to reply, but it was too late. The whole theatre seemed
- taken with the spirit of the Ephesian uproar; they were furious and
- boisterous in the extreme, and Mr. Kirk could hardly obtain a moment,
- though many were desirous in his behalf, to say a few words, as he
- did, very calmly and properly, that the cause of temperance was not at
- all responsible for slavery, and had no connection with it.”
-
-At a Peace Convention held in London, Douglass made an address from
-which the following excerpt is given to show to what an extent he at
-this time shared the illusions of the Abolitionists, who, while
-preaching the doctrine of non-resistance, were steadily feeding the
-passions that made war eventually inevitable:
-
-“You may think it somewhat singular, that I, a slave, an American slave,
-should stand forth at this time as an advocate of peace between two
-countries situated as this and the United States are, when it is
-universally believed that the war between them would result in the
-emancipation of three millions of my brethren, who are now held in the
-most cruel bonds in that country. I believe this would be the result;
-but such is my regard for the principle of peace; such is my deep, firm
-conviction that nothing can be attained for liberty universally by war,
-that were I to be asked the question whether I would have my
-emancipation by the shedding of one single drop of blood, my answer
-would be in the negative.”
-
-Thus he spoke in 1846, but by the time Lincoln was nominated for
-President, and war was actually impending, Douglass was prepared to
-welcome it as a part of the price to be paid for justice, progress, and
-freedom.
-
-His ability to discuss any of the live questions of the day was a matter
-of genuine surprise to the English people. At a farewell entertainment,
-given to him, March 30, 1847, just before leaving London, William
-Howitt, the author, said: “He [Douglass] has appeared in this country
-before the most accomplished audiences, who were surprised, not only at
-his talents, but at his extraordinary information; and all I can say is,
-I hope Americans will continue to send such men as Frederick Douglass,
-and slavery will soon be abolished.”
-
-Mr. Douglass had now spent about twenty-three months in England,
-Scotland, Ireland, and Wales. Like every other new experience, this
-opportunity for travel in foreign lands was an education, and those who
-had watched and heard him most often in his lecture-tours and in social
-intercourse, could easily note his progress in breadth of sympathy and
-intellectual grasp. He learned some things in England that he never
-could have learned in his own country. The possibility of a perfect
-comradeship between people of differing nationalities, creeds, and
-colors was a fact that deeply impressed him. He learned that the great
-men of the times, who had the power to make and unmake international law
-as well as to mould and express public opinion, all regarded slavery as
-a blight on civilization. He learned to have a new and stronger faith in
-the ability and disposition of the white race to deal fairly with his
-race. If he hated slavery more because of what he had seen, heard, and
-experienced in England, he had gained a new strength of heart and mind
-to battle for its extinction in America.
-
-It would have been pleasant for him to have remained abroad and have
-become a citizen of free Britain. No colored man had ever been more
-flattered and fêted by the public. His friends and admirers multiplied
-everywhere. Many of his oversea friends urged him to surrender his
-American allegiance, but no inducement, however alluring, could cause
-him to desert his fellow-men in bonds. In fact, when it was given out in
-the United States that an attempt would be made by his old masters, the
-Aulds, to arrest him on his return and carry him back to a Maryland
-plantation, Douglass wrote: “No inducement could be offered, strong
-enough to make me quit my hold upon America as my home. Whether a slave
-or a freeman, America is my home, and there I mean to spend and be spent
-in the cause of my outraged fellow countrymen.”
-
-As the time approached for him to leave England, a deep concern for his
-safety began to be felt and expressed by his British friends. As an
-outcome of this feeling, a proposition was made by Mrs. Ellen
-Richardson, belonging to the Society of Friends, that a fund be raised
-to purchase his freedom and thus remove all possibility of danger of
-re-enslavement. The proposition was at once accepted, and gladly acted
-upon by Mrs. Richardson and her sister-in-law, Mrs. Henry Richardson. As
-the result of correspondence, the purchase price, £150, was named and
-the sum was raised. The following is a true copy of the legal papers by
-force of which Frederick Douglass became free:
-
- “Know all men by these presents, that I, Thomas Auld, of Talbot County
- and State of Maryland, for and in consideration of the sum of one
- hundred dollars[2] current money, to me paid by Hugh Auld of the city
- of Baltimore, in the said state, at and before the sealing and
- delivery of these presents, the receipt whereof I, the said Thomas
- Auld, do hereby acknowledge, have granted, bargained, and sold, and by
- these presents do grant, bargain, and sell unto the said Hugh Auld,
- his executors, administrators, and assigns, one Negro man, by the name
- of Frederick Bailey or Douglass, as he calls himself—he is now about
- twenty-eight years of age—to have and to hold the said Negro man for
- life. And I, the said Thomas Auld, for myself, my heirs, executors and
- administrators, all and singular, the said Frederick Bailey, alias
- Douglass, unto the said Hugh Auld, his executors, and administrators,
- and against all and every person or persons whatsoever, shall and will
- warrant and forever defend by these presents. In witness whereof, I
- set my hand and seal this thirteenth day of November, eighteen hundred
- and forty-six. (1846.)
-
- THOMAS AULD.
-
- “Signed, sealed and delivered in presence of Wrightson Jones, John C.
- Lear.”
-
-Footnote 2:
-
- The £150 were paid to Hugh Auld who had previously obtained his $100,
- which seems to have been a sort of quit claim deed from his brother
- Thomas.
-
- “To all whom it may concern: Be it known that I, Hugh Auld of the city
- of Baltimore, in Baltimore County, in the State of Maryland, for
- divers good causes and considerations me thereunto moving, have
- released from slavery, liberated, manumitted, and set free, and by
- these presents do hereby release from slavery, liberate, manumit, and
- set free, my Negro man, named Frederick Bailey, otherwise called
- Douglass, being of the age of twenty-eight years or thereabouts, and
- able to work and gain a sufficient livelihood and maintenance; and
- him, the said Negro man named Frederick Douglass, I do declare to be
- henceforth free, manumitted and discharged from all manner of
- servitude to me, my executors and administrators forever.
-
- “In witness whereof, I, the said Hugh Auld, have hereunto set my hand
- and seal the fifth of December, in the year one thousand eight hundred
- and forty-six.
-
- HUGH AULD.
-
- “Sealed and delivered in presence of T. Hanson Belt, James N. S. T.
- Wright.”
-
-This purchase of Mr. Douglass’s freedom was not approved by some of the
-ultra-Abolitionists in the United States. A contributor to _The
-Liberator_ said: “Let us beg of you never to publish another word in
-your paper about the ransom of Douglass. I am quite ashamed that our
-American Abolitionists should expose their narrowness in expressing so
-many regrets at their loss of slave-property in Douglass. They seem to
-feel that he was their property, and not his man.”
-
-Many Abolitionists thought it a violation of anti-slavery principles and
-a waste of money. Mr. Douglass’s own feelings in the matter are stated
-by himself in the following language: “For myself, viewing it in the
-light of a ransom or as money extorted by a robber, and regarding my
-liberty of more value than one hundred and fifty pounds sterling, I
-could not see in it either a violation of the law of morality or
-economy.”
-
-In still another practical way did his English friends show their
-affection for Douglass before he left them. Having learned upon his
-return to America that it was his desire to publish a newspaper, in the
-interest of his people, the sum of $2,500 was without difficulty raised
-and presented to him for that purpose.
-
-The contrast between the conditions of his coming to England and those
-of his returning to the United States affords an interesting evidence of
-his power of conquest. He went to England knowing no one, and personally
-known by no one; he returned to his own country carrying with him the
-friendships of men and women whose acquaintance but few Americans, at
-that time, could have obtained. He went to Great Britain a slave in
-danger of re-capture and re-subjugation; he returned, freed from his
-master by the bounty of English friends. He was empowered and equipped
-to publish the gospel of immediate and unconditional emancipation.
-
-Douglass arrived home in the spring of 1847. He sailed early Sunday,
-April 4th. The last night of his stay abroad was spent as the guest of
-John Bright and his sisters. From no one in England could Douglass have
-received a more gracious welcome and friendly benediction than from this
-great commoner. The only incident that in any way clouded his departure
-was the act of the officers of the steamer _Cambria_ in refusing to let
-him have the berth previously engaged for him. When the English people
-heard of this, great indignation was voiced in the press and from the
-platform, in every part of the United Kingdom. The result was that Mr.
-Cunard in an open letter expressed his regrets, and Mr. Douglass was
-given a stateroom; but he was not permitted to leave it or to place
-himself in view of the other passengers during the sixteen days he was
-upon the sea.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII
- HOME AGAIN AS A FREEMAN—NEW PROBLEMS AND NEW TRIUMPHS
-
-
-Frederick Douglass returned to American shores on the 20th day of April,
-1847. The date and fact of his coming marked the beginning of a new
-chapter in his career. To be free and feel free was a great source of
-strength both to himself and to his friends, in renewing the struggle
-for emancipation. He had not only a bracing sense of security against
-the dangers of capture and return to slavery, but he had gained
-wonderfully in mental and spiritual equipment. The two years in England
-were years of education and inspiration. During that time he had met and
-mingled freely with large men who were dealing successfully with large
-problems. Emancipation had acquired a broader meaning for him as a
-consequence of his visit. In America he had not been able to free
-himself from the conviction that emancipation, confused as it was with
-all the interests of daily life, was a sectional or at most, a national
-question. Looking back, from this distance, upon his own life and the
-great struggle of which it had become a part, he was able to realize
-more fully than before the truth of what Garrison long had taught, that
-slavery was a world question,—a question not of national or sectional
-expediency, but of fundamental human right.
-
-With this larger vision gained by European experience and study, he was
-the better prepared to take up the old battle-cry of “Unconditional
-Emancipation.” His trip abroad had not merely widened his vision and
-deepened his sense of the moral significance of the struggle in which he
-was engaged; it had measurably increased his prestige with the American
-public. The fact that Europe had recognized his talents and had honored,
-in him, the race and the cause he represented, strengthened his position
-as a speaker, and lent a new importance to the things he had to say.
-Before he went to England, he was seldom noticed or referred to in any
-of the great pro-slavery newspapers of the country, except as a
-“runaway-nigger” and a “freak,” “preternaturally clever.” After his
-return, allusions to him were frequent and more abusive. In giving
-notice of a public anti-slavery meeting in Boston, one of these papers
-said: “The Abolitionists headed by William Lloyd Garrison, and tailed by
-Mr. Frederick Douglass, the fugitive slave, are in full blast. He,
-Douglass, elaborates very eloquently and fearfully, and is a good deal
-of a demagogue in black.”
-
-These newspaper attacks on Mr. Douglass were largely due to the
-resentment aroused in this country because of the way in which he had,
-in England, denounced America for its slave-holding policy. This feeling
-was not confined to the newspapers, but was shown at several large
-gatherings that Mr. Douglass addressed in company with William Lloyd
-Garrison.
-
-In Boston an attempt was made to “silence” him. Stones were thrown in
-the meeting at Norristown, Pa., and at a very large assembly held in the
-court house at Harrisburg, Pa., on the 9th of August, 1847, after Mr.
-Garrison had spoken without molestation, Douglass was violently
-interrupted when he tried to speak, and was not allowed to continue. But
-such disturbances were not general, nor did they have the effect of
-shaking the eloquent apostle’s determination to be heard. During the
-same month he and Garrison held numerous anti-slavery meetings in
-Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, and Ohio. There was in these meetings
-abundant evidence that the cause of Abolition was gaining ground. The
-gatherings in Oberlin and Cleveland were especially notable for the
-interest manifested. One of the Cleveland papers had the following
-notice of the meeting: “The Menagerie Company, Garrison, Douglass,
-Foster (and we expect Satan) are to be here on Saturday next and open at
-seven o’ clock in the evening in the big tent, and continue their
-harangues over the Sabbath. This trio has made sale for a great many
-unmerchantable eggs in other places.” It was evident, from the size of
-the Cleveland meeting, and from the interest aroused in the addresses of
-Douglass, Garrison, and Foster that this newspaper did not reflect the
-popular feeling.
-
-In the early part of September, 1847, Mr. Douglass was the presiding
-officer of a colored convention held in Cleveland. His address upon this
-occasion was a notable departure from all former models. It showed that
-he had been giving a great deal of thought to the needs of his people.
-It was a powerful plea, “that the doors of the schoolhouse, the
-workshop, the church, and the college shall be open as freely to our
-children as to the children of other members of the community.” The
-following extract is especially important, and prophetic of the
-present-day needs of the colored race: “Try to get your sons into
-mechanical trades; press them into blacksmith-shops, the machine-shops,
-the joiner’s-shops, the wheelwright-shops, the cooper-shops, and the
-tailor-shops. Every blow of the sledge-hammer wielded by a sable arm is
-a powerful blow in support of our career. Every colored mechanic is, by
-virtue of circumstances, an elevator of his race. Every house built by
-black men is a strong tower against the allied hosts of prejudice. It is
-impossible for us to attach too much importance to this aspect of the
-subject. Trades are important. Wherever a man may be thrown by
-misfortune, if he have in his hands a useful trade, he is useful to his
-fellow-men, and will be esteemed accordingly, and, of all men who need
-trades, we are the most needy.”
-
-It was advice of this kind, in which the passionate controversialist
-displayed from time to time something of the foresight and the
-constructive ability of the statesman, as well as his growing popularity
-with the wiser and more influential class of the white people, that gave
-Douglass high place, and made him the undisputed leader of the free
-colored element of the country.
-
-Two things, above all others, were at this time pressing themselves upon
-his thought and attention: one was his cherished project of establishing
-a newspaper of his own; and the other, the preservation of his friendly
-relations with William Lloyd Garrison.
-
-He had long looked to Garrison and his associates for advice and
-direction in everything of importance, and in an enterprise of such
-moment as this newspaper, he naturally felt that their opinion was
-indispensable. The money was raised, as we have already seen, by English
-friends, and sent over to Mr. Douglass within three months after he
-reached America, with the understanding that the use of it was to be
-left wholly to his discretion. It was clearly stated that, if he thought
-it inexpedient to invest the funds in a newspaper, he could use them,
-under trustees of his personal choosing, for the benefit of himself and
-his children. But he wanted an “organ” of his own. As time went on he
-believed that he perceived the need of it more and more.
-
-“I already saw myself,” he said, “wielding my pen as well as my voice in
-the great work of renovating the public mind and building up a public
-sentiment which should send slavery to the grave, and restore to
-‘liberty and the pursuit of happiness’ the people with whom I suffered.”
-
-Among other considerations that moved him to establish his own paper was
-the conviction that the example of a well-managed and ably edited organ
-would be a powerful evidence that the Negro was too much of a man to be
-held a chattel.
-
-Another side to this question had not occurred to him until this time.
-His attention was called to the fact that he was more than Frederick
-Douglass, the individual. What he did and said, and what he was and was
-to be, were of so much concern to his associates and co-workers that,
-when it became known that he intended to start a newspaper, difficulties
-of all kinds arose. Douglass knew that Garrison opposed his enterprise.
-Could he ignore that leader’s advice? Clearly, his first impression was
-that he could not. He felt then and ever afterward that he owed
-everything to Mr. Garrison. It was the latter who had discovered and
-brought him to the attention of the people. The word of such a man must
-be law to him. Garrison’s philosophy of this whole slavery question was
-accepted by Douglass without an “if.” He was so completely under the
-spell of the great Abolitionist’s personality that, when he learned of
-the opposition to the newspaper project, he was overwhelmed with
-surprise and disappointment.
-
-Various reasons were given for this attitude. Mr. Garrison thought it
-quite “impractical to combine the editor and the lecturer without either
-causing the paper to be more or less neglected, or the sphere of
-lecturing to be seriously circumscribed.” It was further urged that the
-publication was not needed, that it would diminish the support of the
-papers already in existence, and that it could not succeed. Some of
-Douglass’s other friends advised him, that being a man without any
-education and without any literary training, he would make himself
-ridiculous as an editor. These counselors wished to save him from the
-humiliation of an ignominious failure, and cautioned him against the
-mistake of allowing his ambition to bring him into ridicule and
-contempt. This opposition coming from his former advisers and associates
-caused him to hesitate, and, for a time, to give up the scheme; so,
-instead of starting the paper as soon as he received the money to be
-devoted to that purpose, he postponed the project for nearly a year, out
-of deference to the judgment of these wise and close friends.
-
-During the interval, Mr. Douglass had time to examine into the merits of
-the advice against his becoming an editor. He had a further opportunity
-to feel the public pulse and learn something more definite in regard to
-the prospects for good or evil of a newspaper, such as he had in mind.
-He was much in demand on the lecture platform. His vogue was growing all
-the time, and with increasing popularity and power, he saw the
-possibility of a reading constituency large enough to support his
-publication and widen his influence.
-
-But other considerations intervened to widen the breach between himself
-and Garrison. The Abolition movement, as planned and carried on by the
-outspoken leader and his followers, was non-political. It sought to
-effect a revolution, but by the moral regeneration of the people.
-Slavery, as Garrison conceived it, was a national sin which could be
-reached only by an appeal to the national conscience; but the effect of
-the anti-slavery agitation had not been confined to those who accepted
-his revolutionary doctrines. Many persons who were unable to follow the
-relentless logic of Mr. Garrison to its revolutionary conclusions were
-roused to opposition to slavery by the sting and fire of his sermons.
-The number of people who were disposed to do something to check its
-extension was rapidly increasing. This wider anti-slavery movement was
-fast drifting from a mere unorganized sentiment, without force
-sufficient to compel resistance, into a political party with a definite
-platform. Those who could not follow the “disunion” and “non-resistance”
-principles of Garrison, but began to fear the aggression of the
-slave-power, joined the “Free Soil” and “Liberty” parties. The issue
-raised by the Abolitionists was daily becoming less a question of the
-right or wrong of slavery and more a question of how, under the actual
-circumstances in which the institution existed, it might best be gotten
-rid of.
-
-Garrison and his followers, supported by the infallible logic of their
-leader, still clung to the disunion policy, which was primarily a
-discharge of conscience from all complicity with slavery and only
-secondarily a means to the abolition of slavery.
-
-Frederick Douglass, with less consistency, perhaps, and a keener sense
-for the practical exigencies of the situation, was undoubtedly
-influenced by a desire to get into close touch with this larger
-audience. The sequence of events, and Douglass’s position in relation to
-them, tended to convince him that he was justified in his desire to
-found a newspaper. A colored periodical would be no new thing. As early
-as 1827 the _Ram’s Horn_, published by and for Negroes, had been started
-in the North. Other papers conducted by colored men were, _The Mystery_,
-_The Disfranchised American_, _The Northern Star_, and _The Colored
-Farmer_. Opportunity and duty seemed to combine in urging him to do the
-thing that he had abandoned in deference to the advice of Mr. Garrison
-and at length he reached the point where he no longer feared failure,
-every objection urged against his purpose seeming to be overcome.
-
-Being thus convinced, he heroically set himself to the task. The first
-duty was to select a field sufficiently removed from New England not to
-compete with _The Liberator_ and _The Anti-Slavery Standard_. Rochester,
-N. Y., was the place chosen. This was good anti-slavery territory, but
-it was of the Gerrit Smith kind as distinguished from the Garrison kind.
-Both of these men were towers of strength in the cause of Abolition, and
-both were lavish in the expenditure of time and means for the cause of
-freedom.
-
-On the 3d day of December, 1847, appeared the first issue of the _North
-Star_. The name was afterwards changed to _Frederick Douglass’s Paper_,
-in order to avoid all possible confusion with other anti-slavery organs
-with similar names. It was issued weekly, and had an average circulation
-of 3,000 subscribers, with a maximum of 4,000. A colored man named
-Delaney, who afterward distinguished himself as a Union soldier in the
-Civil War, had had some experience in newspaper work and aided Mr.
-Douglass in the publication. Financially the paper soon proved to be
-more of a sacrifice than a money-making venture, but in this there was
-no disappointment, for its purpose was to make public opinion rather
-than money. It took everything that Mr. Douglass had and could obtain to
-keep the _North Star_ in the newspaper firmament. He became deeply in
-debt and was compelled to mortgage his home to meet the heavy demands
-upon him. His old friends and many new ones came repeatedly to his
-rescue. The most important of these was Mrs. Julia Griffith Crofts, a
-gracious woman who took hold of the business management herself. After a
-year’s effort the circulation increased from 2,000 to 4,000, and enough
-money was realized to pay off all indebtedness and lift the mortgage
-from Mr. Douglass’s home. The paper grew in popularity and influence,
-and its patrons and financial helpers included such men as Gerrit Smith,
-Horace Mann, Salmon P. Chase, Joshua R. Giddings, Charles Sumner,
-William H. Seward, and John G. Palfrey. Support came from these leaders,
-not in a patronizing way to help a “poor, struggling colored man’s
-paper,” but rather as a tribute to the high merit of the publication.
-Those who were sure that Mr. Douglass could never write as well as he
-could speak were surprised at this new evidence of his versatility and
-resourcefulness.
-
-In an issue of Mr. Garrison’s paper, dated January 28, 1848, these
-flattering words appeared: “The facility with which Mr. Douglass has
-adapted himself to his new and responsible position is another proof of
-his genius and is worthy of especial praise. His editorial articles are
-exceedingly well written; and the typographical, orthographical, and
-grammatical accuracy with which the _North Star_ is printed surpasses
-that of any other paper ever published by a colored man.” Edmund Quincy,
-commenting on the _North Star_, paid a high tribute to the new editor
-and said that its “literary and mechanical execution would do honor to
-any paper, new or old, anti-slavery or pro-slavery, in the country.” The
-ease with which Mr. Douglass adapted himself to his new responsibility,
-and the high praise that came to him from all parts, added immensely to
-his influence and prestige. What the _North Star_ said editorially on
-the many live questions of the day was liberally quoted and widely
-discussed.
-
-The successful carrying out of this enterprise was a distinct advantage
-to Mr. Douglass as a vindication of his own individuality. It is a good
-thing for a man to have an idea, but it is a better thing for him to
-have sufficient force of character to put his idea into effect. A man
-stands or falls by what he is able to do rather than by what he is able
-to say. Mr. Douglass was told that the responsibility was too great. It
-is always at this point that the strength of a man is tested. Frederick
-Douglass rose above the fears of his friends and took the first step
-that led him to a more commanding position. The determination to have
-his own way in this newspaper enterprise was his first “declaration of
-independence.” While Mr. Douglass tells us that he felt an abiding
-gratitude toward William Lloyd Garrison for what that man had done in
-giving him a start in his upward career, he had reached the point where
-he must cease to rely upon the initiative of others. He must begin to
-trust himself and his own powers, and cease to be a burden upon those
-who had been his guides and teachers.
-
-The anti-slavery cause was assuming large proportions. Every event in
-the social, economic, and political life of the nation pushed this
-question into prominence. All sorts of people were becoming interested
-in the slavery issues, but there were so many sides to the problem that
-it was not always easy to see the right. There was for a time a growing
-confusion of ideas, policies, doctrines, and a puzzling division and
-subdivision of forces, both in the pro-slavery and anti-slavery ranks.
-There were those who thought and asserted that the Federal Constitution
-was a “pro-slavery instrument,” and others who were equally insistent
-that it was anti-slavery. There were those who were Abolitionists in
-doctrine, but in politics voted with one or the other of the old
-parties, both of which were pro-slavery in their policies. There were
-those who, while believing in the equality of the Negro, were extreme in
-their opposition to the admission of women into membership in
-anti-slavery societies. A large number of liberty-loving people could go
-no further in their hostility to slavery than to oppose its extension
-into new territory. These made a partial trial of their anti-slavery
-feelings in the Free Soil and the Liberty parties.
-
-Only two classes of people in the country occupied fixed positions on
-the great question. These were William Lloyd Garrison and his
-associates, and the slave-holders and their followers. Mr. Garrison’s
-famous utterance that “the United States Constitution was a covenant
-with death and an agreement with hell,” and his declaration of “no union
-with slave-holders,” constituted his unvarying platform. The
-slave-holding interests were equally tenacious of their creed and quite
-as fixed in their determination to risk everything rather than yield an
-inch to the anti-slavery clamor.
-
-Enough has been said to show that the time had come when the man who
-wished to be respected, believed in, and followed, must be strong enough
-to have convictions of his own and be responsible to himself and the
-public for these convictions. It was now incumbent upon Mr. Douglass to
-find solid ground on which, amidst so many conflicting opinions, to
-oppose slavery. The conclusions of his studies and thinking had the
-disagreeable effect of leading him away from Garrison’s doctrine of
-“non-resistance” and “disunion.” From his first reading of _The
-Liberator_ he held firmly to Garrison. What that leader said or believed
-on the question, Mr. Douglass accepted without reservation. It is well
-that he did. No one could be a weakling who lived and labored under so
-stimulating a guide. There was something sublime in his moral courage,
-and something extraordinary in the steadiness with which, unswerved by
-the changing circumstances about him, he pursued his fixed purposes. It
-was this quality of soul in him that made him always the dominant figure
-and influence in the contest. Abolition had become so closely identified
-with his name that the question could scarcely be discussed without some
-reference to him. It is no wonder that Frederick Douglass was so
-completely under his spell, but it must certainly be counted an evidence
-of the ex-slave’s intellectual sincerity and strength of mind that when
-he could in practice no longer follow the disunion theory, he had the
-courage and ability to frame a clear and logical statement of the
-grounds for his own action.
-
-His explanation of his change of position is best told in his own words:
-
- “My first opinions were naturally derived and honestly entertained.
- Brought directly, when I escaped from slavery, into contact with
- Abolitionists, who regarded the Constitution as a slave-holding
- instrument and finding their views supported by the united and entire
- history of every department of the government, it is not strange that
- I assumed the Constitution to be just what these friends made it seem
- to be. I was bound, not only by their superior knowledge, to take
- their opinions in respect to this subject, as the true ones, but also
- because I had no means of showing this unsoundness.
-
- “But for the responsibility of conducting a public journal, and the
- necessity imposed upon me of meeting opposite views from Abolitionists
- outside of New England, I should in all probability have remained firm
- in my disunion views. My new circumstances compelled me to re-think
- the whole subject, and to study with some care, not only the just and
- proper rules of legal interpretation, but the origin, design, nature,
- rights, powers, and duties of civil government, and also the relations
- which human beings sustain to it. By such a course of thought and
- reading, I was brought to the conclusion that the Constitution of the
- United States, inaugurated ‘to form a more perfect union, establish
- justice, insure domestic tranquillity, provide for the common defense,
- promote the general welfare and secure the blessings of liberty,’
- could not well have been designed at the same time to maintain and
- perpetuate a system of rapine and murder like slavery, especially as
- not one word can be found in the Constitution to authorize such a
- belief. Then again, if the declared purposes of an instrument are to
- govern the meaning of all its parts and details, as they clearly
- should, the Constitution of our country is pure warrant for the
- abolition of slavery in every state of the Union.”
-
-Having thus, and by other reasonings convinced himself of the
-unconstitutionality of slavery, the editor of the _North Star_ voiced
-the conviction in and out of season, until it was overthrown. In thus
-separating from the Garrisonian Abolitionists, there was much
-heart-burning on both sides, but nothing of the nature of rivalry or
-jealousy, as some writers have attempted to show. Both Garrison and
-Douglass were manly in their attitude toward friend and foe, and too
-sincere in their convictions to be otherwise than high-minded in their
-differences on matters of principle.
-
-It has been charged against Mr. Douglass, and not without reason, that
-he was ungrateful in turning upon the men who had made him what he was;
-that it was ambition and the desire for success in a wider field which
-prompted him to independent action. No doubt there were, and are, those
-to whom his course during this period seemed then and still seems
-unwise, mistaken, and directed rather by selfish interests than by the
-lofty idealism that guided the labors of the Abolitionists, from whom he
-at this time parted company. However this may be, it is likely that the
-differences which sprang up between Garrison and Douglass at this period
-were due, in great part, to certain fundamental differences of mind and
-temperament making this divergence of views inevitable.
-
-The power which Garrison exercised over his contemporaries was due, to a
-considerable degree, to the clearness and vigor of his intellect and the
-unflinching fidelity with which he followed its decrees. The first thing
-that he demanded of himself and of others was that they should think and
-feel rightly in regard to this question of slavery. The revolution he
-sought to effect was a purely spiritual one: he aimed to change men’s
-minds and hearts. The power he desired to overthrow was a state of
-mind—a state of mind which permitted slavery to exist.
-
-Douglass, on the contrary, was destined, by natural disposition, for a
-different field of action. He was by temperament a politician, and, like
-all politicians, more or less of an opportunist. He was less interested
-in the theory upon which slavery should be abolished than he was in the
-means by which freedom could be achieved. No doubt he was influenced to
-a considerable degree, in the formulation of his views in regard to the
-Constitution, by his practical sense of what the situation demanded,
-and, even if these views have not been upheld by subsequent
-interpretation of that document, they still appeal strongly to common
-sense.
-
-Whatever motives may have influenced Douglass in taking the position
-that he did, there seems to be no reason for doubting their sincerity.
-Though drawn into different fields of endeavor in the cause of
-anti-slavery, the importance of Garrison and his work was in no wise
-diminished in Douglass’s eyes. In 1860 he wrote to _The Liberator_
-concerning the anti-slavery society: “So far from working for the
-annihilation of that society, I never failed, even in the worst times of
-my controversy with it, to recognize that organization as the most
-efficient generator of anti-slavery sentiment in the country.” And in
-September, 1890, he said in Boston: “It was they [Garrison and Phillips]
-who made Abraham Lincoln and the Republican party possible. What
-abolished slavery was the moral sentiment which had been created, not by
-the pulpit, but by the Garrisonian platform.”
-
-Finally, it seems clear that, through all this controversy, Douglass
-retained his affection for William Lloyd Garrison, and that this feeling
-was honestly reciprocal. There is, in the life of the great
-Abolitionist, as told by his children, a bit of correspondence that
-reveals the tender side of these two robust human natures. It was at a
-time when Mr. Garrison was very much disturbed on account of the Negro
-newspaper project. Mr. Douglass had accompanied him on a lecture tour as
-far west as Cleveland, where Garrison became ill and his colored
-colleague was compelled to leave him to meet other engagements. Letters
-were frequently exchanged, but for some reason they were not received.
-This mutual failure to hear from each other gave rise to many unpleasant
-misgivings. Samuel J. May, the friend of both, writing to Garrison under
-date of October 8, 1847, says: “Frederick Douglass was very much
-troubled that he did not get any tidings from you when he reached
-Syracuse on the 24th of September. He left reluctantly, yet thinking
-that you would be following in a day or two, and as he did not get any
-word from you at Waterloo, nor at Auburn, he was almost sure he should
-meet you at my house. His countenance fell and his heart failed him when
-he found me likewise in suspense about you. Not until he arrived at West
-Winfield did he get any relief, and then through _The Liberator_ of the
-23d.”
-
-Some days afterward, Mr. Garrison wrote as follows: “Is it not strange
-that Douglass has not written a single line to me or any one else in
-this place, inquiring after my health, since he left me on a bed of
-illness? It will also greatly surprise our friends in Boston to hear
-that, in regard to his project for establishing the _North Star_, he
-never opened his lips to me on the subject, nor asked my advice in any
-particular whatever! Such conduct grieves me to the heart. His conduct
-about the paper has been impulsive, inconsiderate, and highly
-inconsistent with his decision in Boston. What will his English friends
-say of such a strange somerset? I am sorry that friend Quincy did not
-express himself more strongly against the project in _The Liberator_. It
-is a delicate matter, I know, but it must be met with firmness.”
-
-True to his own high sense of gratitude to Mr. Garrison, and always
-deferential to the latter’s position in the anti-slavery fight, Mr.
-Douglass never permitted himself to utter a single word of criticism or
-complaint. The field was large enough and the work was great enough for
-each to display the full measure of his respective powers toward the one
-great object, the abolition of slavery. During this period, Mr. Douglass
-always found time and opportunity for platform work. Every great
-gathering of the anti-slavery forces was enlivened in interest by his
-presence. His power as an orator did not diminish, as was predicted, by
-his continued ascendency as an editor. On the contrary, his words gained
-force as he became more confident of himself, and more clear in regard
-to his convictions. In the great anti-slavery convention held in New
-York, he made a speech which revealed remarkable strength. The following
-extract from a report of the meeting is worth quoting in proof of the
-stirring quality of his address:—
-
-“Frederick Douglass now takes the platform, and is welcomed with
-applause. The assembly is now fixed in its close attention, and
-Frederick is going on to show up the cowardly and sneaking conduct of
-John P. Hale in bringing in a bill to protect property, and not daring
-to stand up and fearlessly advocate the right of slaves to run away, and
-the right and duty of Abolitionists to protect them. Frederick is
-describing _Punch’s_ portraits of Brother Jonathan, with the devil
-hovering over him, eyeing with satisfaction passing events. The audience
-give him great applause. He is speaking to great effect, portraying the
-wrongs of the colored population of this nation. His eloquence sways the
-great assembly with him. He denounces the Northerners, who swear to
-support the Constitution, as the real slave-holders of the country. It
-is good to listen to him. He shows up the Northern apologists of slavery
-as those whose smiles he does not want. He pledges himself to denounce
-those enemies of God and man, who swear to support the Constitution, as
-his enemies. Frederick has got the audience into a great state of
-glorification; and he is now showing that there is no way to abolish
-slavery except by the dissolution of the Union. There, he is done, and
-the meeting is breaking up. It has been a pleasant and profitable time.”
-
-In the course of his career as a public speaker, Douglass developed a
-capacity for repartee that made him the dread of any one who had the
-temerity to interrupt him in a public discussion. At the convention to
-which I have just referred, he was described as “with brows knit, fiery
-eyes like daggers, scorn upon his thick lips, and lurking in his sable
-woe-begone visage the traces of malignity, disappointment, and despair.”
-By another paper, when speaking on the same platform with Garrison,
-Phillips, and Lucretia Mott, he was called the “master-genius of the
-crowd.”
-
-In 1848, Mr. Douglass took another step forward, and became an advocate
-of female suffrage. He had had opportunity to judge of the worth of
-woman in the anti-slavery movement. The work done by Lucretia Mott, the
-Grimké sisters, Frances Wright, Ernestine L. Rose, and other forceful
-leaders, strongly impressed him with what seemed to him the great
-injustice of excluding such women from the benefits of those rights by
-means of which citizenship could be protected. On the 19th day of July
-of that year the Seneca Falls convention was held. The following extract
-from the _North Star_ shows Mr. Douglass’s position:
-
-“We are free to say that in respect to political rights, we hold women
-to be justly entitled to all we claim for man. We go further and express
-our conviction that all political rights, which it is expedient for man
-to exercise, it is equally so for women. All that distinguishes man as
-an intelligent and accountable being is equally true of woman; and if
-that government only is just which governs only by the free consent of
-the governed, there can be no reason in the world for denying to woman
-the exercise of the elective franchise, or a hand in making and
-administering the laws of the land. Our doctrine is that ‘Right is of no
-sex.’ We, therefore, bid the women engaged in this movement our humble
-Godspeed.”
-
-Mr. Douglass consistently held to these views ever afterward. He was one
-of the first of all prominent Americans to champion the cause of female
-suffrage, and the women in return esteemed him and accorded to him more
-honor than has been shown to most men by their organizations. He was
-always a guest in any large gathering of woman suffragists.
-
-In connection with the labor of running his newspaper and keeping up a
-strenuous interest in the many public questions that appealed to his
-heart and conscience, it is fitting to make some mention of his early
-experiences in Rochester, N. Y., his home, and the scene of his most
-important activities for twenty-five years. He became deeply attached to
-the city and its people. He said: “I know of no place in the Union where
-I could have located at the time with less resistance, or received a
-larger measure of sympathy and coöperation, and I now look back to my
-life and labor with unalloyed satisfaction, having spent a quarter of a
-century among its people. I shall always feel more at home there than
-anywhere else in this country.”
-
-When Mr. Douglass began the publication of the _North Star_, there were
-people in the city who felt it a sort of disgrace that a Negro paper
-should be established in their midst. This was not surprising. It is
-doubtful if, at that time, any inhabited spot in the United States could
-have been found entirely free from race prejudice. So far as the Negro
-was concerned, wherever he wished and tried to be a good citizen, he
-found himself in the “enemy’s country.” The most troublesome of
-Douglass’s early experiences in Rochester was the attempt to educate his
-children. They were not allowed to attend the public school in the
-district in which he lived and owned property; and his young daughter,
-who was the “apple of his eye,” was so unkindly treated in Tracy
-Seminary, a school for girls, that she had to leave it. This difficulty,
-like every other that he encountered in his career, served only to
-embolden him; it encouraged him to fight. He went at the question with
-his characteristic force, and before long every barrier was removed and
-the children of black parents were freely admitted to all the schools of
-the city. Indeed he conducted himself so well and was personally so
-interesting that he soon became a popular citizen of Rochester, and his
-friends were as numerous and cordial in pro-slavery as in anti-slavery
-circles. Among those mentioned in his biography, for whom he had a
-special fondness, are Isaac Post, William Hallowell, Samuel D. Porter,
-William C. Bliss, Benjamin Fish, Asa Anthony, and Myron Holley. From
-time to time he addressed the citizens in Corinthian Hall. His audiences
-were always composed of the best people in Rochester, and in this way he
-did much to break down the prejudice against his race. This hall was
-built and owned by a prominent pro-slavery man, but so great was his
-respect for Mr. Douglass that he cheerfully allowed it to be used for
-the propaganda of emancipation. Thus the black leader became proud of
-Rochester and in more ways than can well be recited, the city honored
-him as no other colored man has ever been honored by an American
-municipality.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII
- FREE COLORED PEOPLE AND COLONIZATION
-
-
-The recognized leadership of Frederick Douglass among the colored people
-of the country may be dated from the publication of the _North Star_.
-Prior to that time he was regarded as an Abolition orator and a
-conspicuous example of the possibilities of the Negro race. He had not
-yet established his relationship with the free colored people of the
-North.
-
-Douglass came from the South. His hardest experiences and bitterest
-memories were those of the Southern plantations. It was the toiling
-black masses, whose fortunes he had shared, that claimed his first and
-profoundest sympathy and interest. “Freedom first and rights afterward,”
-was the precept that had thus far guided his efforts in behalf of his
-race. His position as the publisher of a colored newspaper brought him
-into closer touch with the interests and aspirations of the free colored
-people of the North. They had obtained freedom, but they were thus far
-in practice, to a large degree, without rights. Douglass seemed to feel
-that the work he was doing and the position he occupied gave him some
-special claim to the support and loyalty of these people. He sometimes
-complained of and took deeply to heart the criticism and petty
-fault-finding with which a few of his fellow freedmen followed his
-movements. But, on the whole, they gave him generous support, and
-accorded him grateful recognition for his services. The leading colored
-men of the period who, in various ways, were helping the cause of
-emancipation, rallied around him and lived and labored in intimate
-association with him.
-
-At this time the free Negroes formed a considerable portion of the
-American population. In 1850 there were about 230,000 of them in the
-slave-states and about 200,000 in the free-states. The liberation from
-bondage of this nearly half-million of colored persons had been brought
-about in various ways. The larger portion of them in the Northern states
-became free through their emancipation by Northern slave-holders. Those
-in the slave-states were either manumitted by their former masters or
-had by personal enterprise bought their own freedom. Here and there were
-a few West Indian colored people who had come to the United States to
-find a home. An ever-increasing number in the North were runaway slaves
-who had gained their freedom in some such way as Frederick Douglass had
-gained his. These were for the most part a superior class of men and
-women. The fact that they had the courage and enterprise to win their
-own liberty is good evidence that they had personal initiative and
-ambition. Among their number were many who, like Douglass, had secretly
-learned to read and write while they were still slaves. Others were
-first-rate mechanics who, in spite of opposition, found good employment.
-
-The attitude of the white citizens of the North toward the free people
-of color was, in almost every way, hostile. The slave-holders of the
-South were angered by the loss of their property and the Northern people
-were annoyed by the presence, in their midst, in ever-increasing
-numbers, of this class. In fact, prejudice against the free blacks in
-the Northern states came to be of the most uncompromising sort. In many
-sections the status of the free Negro was often little better than that
-of an outlaw. It was literally true that he had “no rights that a white
-man was bound to respect.” Wherever the Negro turned his face for
-encouragement or for opportunity, he met with opposition and
-discouragement. His children were generally shut out of the public and
-private schools. In many instances those which would admit colored
-pupils, in defiance of public sentiment, were burned down or mobbed and
-the teachers ostracized. The case of Miss Prudence Crandall, in
-Canterbury, Conn., in 1833, is fairly illustrative of the public feeling
-in regard to Negro education. Miss Crandall was a beautiful young
-Quakeress of tender heart and great courage, who had opened a school for
-young women in the village of Canterbury. A chance admission of a
-colored girl raised such a storm of indignation among her neighbors that
-she was assailed by a mob and an attempt was made to burn the building.
-When she still persisted in having her way, she was arrested and sent to
-jail.
-
-Other instances of this kind might be cited. In nothing were the
-Northern people more bitterly intolerant than in their opposition to the
-education of the children of free colored families. The same spirit that
-in the slave-holding states accounted it a crime to teach colored people
-to read and write, made it very dangerous for any man or woman to do, or
-attempt to do, the same thing in the free-states.
-
-In some of the Northern commonwealths, as Illinois, for example, the
-term “black laws” was given to a code of special regulations which were
-applied to men and women of a dark complexion. In nearly all of the
-states north of the Ohio, the Negro was disfranchised either by
-constitution, statute, or public sentiment. In practice, he was not
-regarded as a member of political society and was, consequently, almost
-wholly without the guarantee of civil rights. The Christian people were
-often as hostile as non-church people. Mr. Garrison mentions “a certain
-Baptist church in Hartford, Conn., where the ‘Negro pews’ were boarded
-up in front so that only peep-holes gave an outlook; truly a human
-menagerie.” In a Massachusetts town, the floor was cut out from under a
-colored member’s pew by the church authorities, so that he could not
-occupy it. In all means of travel, either by rail or stage-coach, the
-Negro passenger was rigidly quarantined. His presence was everywhere
-frowned upon unless he appeared as a servant or a slave.
-
-This anti-Negro feeling in the North was not a passing whim or
-sentiment; it was deeply rooted and constitutional. People, noble and
-ignoble, were alike influenced by race prejudice. Abolitionists found
-themselves swayed to such an extent by the sentiment about them that
-they often did not have the courage to act consistently with their
-principles. Mr. Douglass gives a very interesting incident in the early
-part of his career, which aptly illustrates how at times race feeling
-manifested itself in the most unexpected places. He had been invited to
-speak at Concord, N. H., by a subscriber of _The Liberator_. Arriving in
-the town, he went directly to the home of the Abolitionist, where it was
-expected he would be entirely welcome. He was received with anything but
-enthusiasm. When the good man got ready to go to the church, where the
-meeting was to take place, he drove off alone and left the orator of the
-occasion to walk and find the way—a distance of two miles—as best he
-could. Upon reaching the church, Mr. Douglass was obliged to introduce
-himself, as no one was willing to risk his reputation by standing
-sponsor for a Negro. After the address, the Abolitionists went to their
-several homes for lunch, but no one invited Mr. Douglass to eat, and the
-hotel did not entertain Negroes. Hungry, chilly, and desolate, he found
-his way to the graveyard, and while roaming among the graves and
-contemplating the equality of men in death, he was approached by a
-gentleman who proved to be a Democratic senator from New Hampshire. He
-took Mr. Douglass to his home and treated him with the greatest
-courtesy.
-
-Another cause of racial antagonism was the dread, on the part of
-slave-owners, that the presence of an increasing number of free colored
-people in the free-states would be an incentive to the more enterprising
-slaves to run away. This fear was certainly justified by the constantly
-enlarging stream of fugitives. The Negro’s growing desire for freedom
-was the fundamental weakness of the slave-system. When the veterans of
-the War of 1812 returned to the Southern states and told of the land of
-Canada which was consecrated to free men, the seed of discontent took
-root in slavery’s soil. The good news was passed along, and, as a
-result, thousands of slaves learned to associate the words Canada and
-freedom. Many a one, ignorant of everything except his master and the
-plantation, had received tidings of the Haytian struggle for liberty; of
-the Nat Turner uprising in Virginia; and of the success of those who had
-the courage and enterprise to flee to Massachusetts, New York, and
-elsewhere north of the Ohio River. Negroes who had dared to emancipate
-themselves in the way Frederick Douglass had done were a direct menace
-to the security of slavery. Every man who succeeded in making his escape
-began at once to plan and plot for the escape of those he had left
-behind. On the border-land of freedom there was continuous skirmishing
-for friends in chains.
-
-In spite of the humble position they occupied, the free Negroes, in one
-way or another, helped to make sentiment against the slave-power. Like
-Douglass, they became “human arguments,” at once offering evidence as to
-the capacity of the race and the limitations that slavery imposed upon
-it. They were quickeners of the public conscience.
-
-Since the Negroes were escaping from Southern plantations, in spite of
-all precautions and every kind of threat and punishment, an organized
-effort was made to send all free colored people out of the country and
-deposit them on the west shore of Africa. This movement found expression
-in the American Colonization Society, which was organized in 1817. Its
-declared purposes were:
-
-(1) “To colonize the blacks on the West Coast of Africa.”
-
-(2) “To discourage manumission by slave-holders.”
-
-(3) “To avoid insurrection.”
-
-An attempt was put forth to make this colonization scheme a national
-policy, and the general government, as well as the several states, was
-appealed to for its support. In many of the slave-holding states there
-were direct appropriations of money to forward this enterprise.
-Ministers, statesmen, educators, slave-holders, and many who were not
-slave-holders, endorsed the plan of the Colonization Society as a most
-happy solution of the difficult problem of dealing with the Negro
-question. It met with popular favor throughout the country. The Southern
-people saw in it the removal of a great menace to slavery; it appealed
-to the humane sentiments of the North, for it seemed to say to the free
-people, “Now we are going to give you an opportunity, and will
-materially aid you to found a government of your own on the soil of
-Africa.” To some of the Negroes this policy appeared fair and generous,
-especially when they considered the extent to which, by popular
-prejudice, they were shut out from the rights and benefits supposed to
-be the natural heritage of all American citizens. Certain it is that
-nothing concerning the Negro had, up to this time, been proposed in
-which men of the North and South met so nearly on common ground. In
-1834, such names as James Madison, Chief Justice Marshall, General
-Lafayette, Henry Clay, Daniel Webster, and Gerrit Smith were enrolled
-among the officers of the society. But in spite of the distinguished
-character of those who were associated with the movement, it was thought
-by many that the propaganda carried on by the Colonization Society did
-much to increase the prejudice against the colored people. The following
-extracts from some of the speeches of its members and friends, and from
-its documents and publications, show the pro-slavery spirit of the
-society:
-
-Henry Clay said: “The emancipated slave should be removed. This is a
-condition indispensable. Expense of expatriation is to be defrayed by a
-fund to be derived from the labor of each freedman.”
-
-Judge Bullock of Kentucky said: “He [the colored man] is an exotic that
-does not and cannot flourish on American soil. There is no place for him
-in this country. It is not their land, and they cannot be made at home
-here.”
-
-_The Colonization Journal_ said: “You cannot abolish slavery, for God is
-pledged to sustain it.”
-
-“Policy, and even the voice of humanity, forbid the progress of
-manumission. It would be as humane to throw them from the decks in the
-Middle Passage as to set them free in this country. Free blacks are a
-greater nuisance than slaves. This class of persons is a curse and a
-contagion where they reside.”—_Colonization Report_, iv, 261.
-
-“An anomalous race of beings, the most depraved on earth.”
-
-“They constitute a class by themselves, out of which no individual can
-be elevated and below which none can be depressed. Even necessity places
-them in a class of degraded beings.”
-
-“Christianity cannot do for them here what it will do for them in
-Africa. This is no fault of the colored man, nor the white man, but an
-ordinance of Providence, and no more to be changed than the laws of
-motion.”
-
-“If the free people of color were generally taught to read, it might be
-an inducement for them to remain in this country. We should offer them
-no such inducement.”
-
-“It must appear evident to all ... that measures calculated to bind the
-colored people to this country and seeking to raise them to a level with
-the whites, whether by founding colleges or in any other way, tends
-directly to counteract and thwart the whole plan of colonization.”
-
-Such were the teachings and spirit of the American Colonization Society
-at that time. The effect was naturally and necessarily brought home, in
-some form or other, to every colored man, woman, and child in the
-free-states. Justifying, as it did, an already existing prejudice, its
-tendency was, everywhere and in every direction, to bring about a
-narrowing of opportunities. Thus, there soon sprang up an active
-opposition to the society and its purposes. The anti-slavery members
-withdrew their support when they saw that the organization was almost
-wholly pro-slavery in spirit and purpose.
-
-Meanwhile, the colored people began to show themselves worthy of respect
-in the efforts they were making to improve their own condition. It could
-not be denied that, in those Northern states where he was given an
-opportunity to work, the Negro was, on the whole, a peaceful, loyal,
-law-abiding, and industrious citizen. In spite of the might of all the
-forces against him, he doggedly persisted in his determination to be a
-man, to win a right to remain in this country, and to deserve the
-privileges of citizenship therein. No race under like conditions ever
-exhibited greater patience and faith in the ultimate triumph of right
-over wrong.
-
-In times of war the Negro was instantly ready to sacrifice himself for
-the good of his country. As sailor or soldier, no commander ever had
-occasion to complain of his courage or lack of soldierly qualities. Just
-before the battle of New Orleans, in the winter of 1814, General
-Jackson, through his Adjutant General, made the following stirring
-address to his black soldiers:
-
- “To the Men of Color—Soldiers: From the shores of Mobile I called you
- to arms, I invited you to share the perils, and to divide the glory
- with your white countrymen. I expected much from you, for I was not
- unmindful of those qualities which must render you so formidable to an
- invading foe. I knew that you could endure hunger and thirst and all
- the hardships of war. I knew that you loved the land of your nativity,
- and that, like ourselves, you had to defend all that was most dear to
- man, but you surpassed my hopes. I have found in you, united to these
- qualities, that noble enthusiasm which impels to great deeds.
-
- “Soldiers! The President of the United States shall be informed of
- your conduct on the present occasion and the voice of the
- representatives of the American nation shall applaud your valor, as
- your general now praises your valor.”
-
-The black heroes of New Orleans nobly won a place on the roll of honor,
-among those who strove for the protection and preservation of the
-American republic.
-
-In the arts of peace and in the every-day struggles to live and survive
-the forces that made for his degradation, the Negro showed a courage and
-a disposition altogether creditable. While many were thinking that the
-black people were hopelessly incapable of absorbing American
-civilization, the latter were building churches of their own and
-organizing the great African Methodist Episcopal Zion, and the Colored
-Methodist Episcopal Church. These have steadily grown in membership
-until they have come to be numbered among the great religious bodies of
-the Christian world. They also founded and developed a Baptist
-organization which, with its schools, colleges, and missions, is
-regarded as one of the important civilizing agencies of the country.
-
-What the colored people accomplished for themselves, in their great
-religious associations and under so many hindering influences, is of far
-greater importance than is generally understood, or recognized by the
-American people. To the restraining and humanizing forces of these
-religious bodies, is largely due the peaceful and law-abiding character
-of the Negro population. In those critical periods of our history a race
-with passions less in restraint might have caused no end of trouble and
-bloodshed. These efforts of the free colored people of the North to
-improve their condition by means of religious training, were accompanied
-by endeavors to provide themselves with the facilities for secular
-education. There was never a time in the history of the American Negro
-when he did not show an eagerness to learn. Whether on the plantation in
-the far South, where ignorance in the slave was slavery’s only security,
-or in the northern states, where schools were closed against him by
-popular prejudice, he was always struggling, by night and by day, to
-obtain an education. The most important and creditable thing in his
-career as slave or freeman, and the most striking thing in his
-achievements, is his passion and struggle to lift from himself and his
-race the dark mantle of ignorance. This persistent determination to be
-educated has won for him more consideration and more friends among the
-white race, than any other one trait.
-
-When practically every school, public and private, closed its doors
-against the admission of a Negro child, these courageous people tried to
-establish schools of their own. In every Northern community where there
-were colored persons some way was provided for their education.
-Sometimes classes would meet in a private house, like that of Primus
-Hall in Boston; at other times in a Negro church, and often in a barn.
-In these early efforts to furnish means of education, in spite of the
-protest of white neighbors, there was exhibited fine courage, impressive
-sacrifice, and rare consecration. Here the Negro was always at his best.
-Such men as Primus Hall and the Ruffins in Massachusetts; Nelson Wells
-in Maryland; John F. Ganes and Peter H. Clark in Ohio; John F. Cook in
-Washington; John Peterson in New York; Thomas and Fannie Jackson Coppin
-in Pennsylvania, all noble types of men and women, saw to it that ways
-and means for the education of the children of their day and generation
-should be provided. Hundreds of the best types of white men and women
-became interested in the education of the Negro as a result of his own
-persistent efforts in this direction. Some of these friends gave
-themselves as teachers, while others gave money for the founding and
-sustaining of schools and colleges. A few of those started at this early
-period, still live, many colored men and women, who have since become
-prominent in public affairs, having received their education in these
-establishments.
-
-One of the most interesting of these schools that have survived the
-revolution of conditions is the “Institute for Colored Youth,” founded
-in Philadelphia in 1837, from funds bequeathed for that purpose by
-Richard Humphrey. The trustees were instructed to establish an
-institution “for the education of the descendants of the African race in
-school learning, in the various branches of the mechanical arts and
-trades and agriculture.”
-
-In the preamble of the constitution, the following language is used:
-
-“We believe that the most successful method of elevating the moral and
-intellectual character of the descendants of Africa, as well as
-improving their social condition, is to extend to them the benefits of a
-good education, and instruct them in the knowledge of some useful trade
-or business whereby they may be enabled to obtain a comfortable
-livelihood by their own industry; and through these means to prepare
-themselves for fulfilling the various duties of domestic and social life
-with reputation and fidelity, as good citizens and pious men.”
-
-This school has recently been reorganized and considerably enlarged, and
-removed to Cheyney, Pa., near Philadelphia, the work being entrusted to
-Hugh M. Browne, an educator of proved worth and responsibility. It
-starts out upon a career of increased usefulness, with the express
-purpose of fitting teachers for their appointed work.
-
-The men and women who have graduated from the Institute have more than
-justified the generosity of its founder, and they have likewise
-reflected the unexampled excellence as a teacher of Mrs. Fannie Jackson
-Coppin, an early graduate of Oberlin, and one of the first principals of
-this famous school in Philadelphia. Her influence on the lives and
-careers of many prominent men and women of the Negro race is quite
-beyond comparison with that of any other of our early Negro educators.
-
-Charlotte L. Fortin, now Mrs. Frank J. Grimké, Frances Ellen Watkins
-Harper, and Mary Ann Shadd Carey must always be mentioned among the men
-and women whose devotion to the education of the members of their race
-has made the American people recognize the justice and the usefulness of
-giving the Negro the teaching he so earnestly desires.
-
-The lack of economic and industrial opportunities of the free colored
-people, prior to the Civil War, can be easily inferred from what has
-already been said concerning the general sentiment of proscription that
-prevailed. As a general rule, they were not allowed to work at any of
-the trades and their children were not accepted as apprentices. It has
-already been noticed how impossible it was for Mr. Douglass, even in
-Massachusetts, to follow his occupation as a ship-calker, although, as
-we have seen, he had no trouble in obtaining good employment in
-Baltimore.
-
-But the Negro, in this as in matters of education, persisted in his
-effort to learn trades and to work at them. There were in the
-free-states a considerable number of colored mechanics. Many of them had
-fitted themselves for their work while in slavery, and either by
-self-purchase or as runaways, had obtained their freedom. From these
-mechanics the trades were passed along to others by apprenticeships. In
-this way colored men entered and maintained themselves in many
-employments. There were always some people who were willing to hire
-skilled Negro mechanics. In cities like Philadelphia, they were, for a
-time, important factors in the industrial life. Indeed, long before
-slavery was abolished, every large northern city had a certain number of
-enterprising individuals who had succeeded in establishing themselves in
-some of the trades. In many communities they were making commendable
-headway as contractors, caterers, shopkeepers, tailors, shoemakers, and
-barbers. Not a few of them accumulated small fortunes. A number too had
-built up enviable reputations in the professions, especially in
-medicine, the ministry, and journalism. Some obtained their education in
-England, but most of them managed to get their training in this country.
-
-In all this activity and enterprise they were not without leaders of
-force and intelligence. In the period covered by the anti-slavery
-movement, there was a remarkable group of aggressive and influential
-colored agitators. Without attempting to name all the prominent men who
-coöperated with Mr. Douglass in the anti-slavery warfare, we should
-mention a few, in order to make complete any account of the struggle in
-which their leader was so heroically engaged. Henry Highland Garnet of
-New York, was a gifted and thoroughly educated man. He was a
-Presbyterian minister and as such held an influential position, being
-elected at one time as a delegate to a Peace Conference at Frankfort,
-Germany. Charles Lennox Remond, Dr. James McCune Smith, Samuel R. Ward,
-H. Ford Douglass, Martin R. Delaney, John M. Langston, J. Howard Day,
-and Mifflin W. Gibbs, were men of rare oratorical gifts and were heard
-and admired on every great anti-slavery occasion. Robert Purvis, of
-Philadelphia, would have held a high place in any age, and the cause of
-freedom would have suffered without his aid. He was a man of patrician
-manners and had all the instincts of an aristocrat. He was for many
-years, vice-president of the National Anti-Slavery Society, and he
-enjoyed the intimate acquaintance and association of some of the most
-eminent men of his time.
-
-It would scarcely be possible to write a history of the anti-slavery
-movement without mentioning the work of William Still. He had the rare
-powers of heart and mind that gave him an interest in and a large grasp
-of affairs. He was one of the original stockholders of _The Nation_, and
-a close friend of John Brown’s. It was at his house that the latter’s
-family were concealed after the Harper’s Ferry tragedy. Mr. Still’s
-contribution to the literature of the anti-slavery cause has a special
-value and is nowhere duplicated.
-
-These colored men, who were associated with Mr. Douglass, got their
-training in the school of adversity. They were permitted to share few of
-the joys of life. Men of strong faith, they spent themselves in the
-service of their people. When the history of the Negro in America comes
-finally to be written and scholars seek to tell the story of the curious
-problem in civilization which his presence here creates, these
-dark-skinned heroes of an unpopular race may find their place in the
-ranks of those who helped to benefit the world.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX
- THE UNDERGROUND RAILWAY AND THE FUGITIVE SLAVE LAW
-
-
-Pro-slavery and anti-slavery were at this time the names of two sets of
-ideas and two states of mind that no longer admitted of compromise. The
-words meant immeasurably more in 1850 than they had in 1830. If they had
-ever been mere academic terms, they were fast becoming fighting
-terms,—the standards of two hostile camps. In the minds of the people,
-they stood, respectively, for irreconcilable principles. With every
-fresh event affecting either one side or the other, new and more intense
-animosities were engendered, and the two forces were driven farther and
-farther apart. Those who believed in the institution, became more and
-more firmly fixed in their determination not only to resist every attack
-upon it, but to give it the widest possible extension. Those who stood
-opposed to slavery were equally fixed in their determination that it
-should be destroyed.
-
-The anti-slavery movement was fast becoming something more than a
-sentiment or an opinion with which one might try conclusions in the
-forum. It was fast becoming a revolutionary movement which meant force,
-more force, and, finally, the utmost force. All the time Frederick
-Douglass, like William Lloyd Garrison, was in the forward ranks. The
-tone of “no compromise” rang out with increasing insistence.
-
-“Come what will,” said Douglass, “I hold it to be morally certain that
-sooner or later, by fair means or foul means, in peace or in blood, in
-judgment or in mercy, slavery is doomed to cease out of this otherwise
-goodly land, and liberty is destined to become the settled law of the
-republic.”
-
-“I am in earnest,” said Garrison, “I will not equivocate, I will not
-excuse, I will not retract a single inch, and I will be heard.”
-
-These declarations by these two conspicuous Abolitionists are aptly
-expressive of the growing intensity of the anti-slavery feeling. Such
-words called more loudly for action than for argument. What was known in
-the United States during the anti-slavery struggle as the “Underground
-Railway,” best represents all that was aggressive and militant in that
-contest. This so-called “railway system” was constituted and operated in
-defiance of law by the Abolitionists. It was Abolition in action.
-
-But if the Underground Railway was conducted in defiance of law, it
-should be said that the law in its terms, spirit, and effects seemed to
-them who were engaged in operating the road to be in defiance of those
-principles of liberty and the rights of man, which they had been taught
-to think were higher than any positive enactment of a legislature.
-
-The Underground Railway had none of the features of the modern railway,
-except the carrying of passengers, and these were limited in kind and in
-the direction of the travel. No one could obtain passage on this road,
-unless he or she were a slave, and wanted to be free. The trains ran in
-but one direction, and that was Northward. There were no “Jim Crow”
-cars, no sleepers and no smokers, and all passengers were carried free
-of charge. It was a railroad without stockholders, but it had
-innumerable directors. No dividends were paid except to passengers, and
-such dividends were in the form of certificates of freedom from bondage.
-
-To be more explicit, the Underground Railway was a system of clandestine
-travel, extending from the borders of “Mason and Dixon’s Line” through
-the North and West to Canada. The residence of Mr. Douglass was one of
-the last stations on the line before reaching British soil. Much has
-been written about this mysterious railway, but the details of its
-activities have never been told. From September 26, 1850, to the
-breaking out of the Civil War, the new and rigid Fugitive Slave Law was
-in active operation, and it was in open violation of this measure that
-the Underground Railway was conducted. A slave, and sometimes an entire
-family or body of slaves, would make the dash for liberty, escaping
-across the borders of Maryland into Pennsylvania. There they found
-themselves in the hands of friendly Quakers, who piloted them by night
-to other stations, where they were secreted until a favorable
-opportunity presented itself to push them along farther north.
-
-Mr. Douglass’s house in Rochester was a large three-story frame
-structure, situated in the centre of four acres of land on South Avenue,
-two miles from the business portion of the city. It stood out by itself,
-the nearest residence being fully five hundred feet away to the north.
-This was the objective point, before reaching Canada, for many slaves
-fleeing from the South. The tales of privation and suffering told by
-these men, women, and children who escaped half-clad, encountering in
-the wintertime snow-drifts and zero weather, made a profound impression
-on the people of the North through whose towns they passed and in whose
-homes they constantly sought protection. Thus it was that many a
-Northern farmer, convinced, it may be, of the right or expediency of
-slavery, found himself compelled, from motives of common humanity, to
-open his doors to these refugees, and grant their appeals for food and
-shelter. Many a cold winter night has a knock come to Mr. Douglass’s
-door, when a white-faced stranger, covered with frost and snow, would
-announce in whispered tones that he had a sleigh full of runaway Negroes
-_en route_ for Canada. Mr. Douglass, or Mrs. Douglass in her husband’s
-absence, calling the boys, Lewis, Fred and Charles, would have fires
-started in that part of the house where fugitives were hidden away, and
-at an opportune time they were taken to Charlotte, seven miles from
-Rochester, and placed aboard a Lake Ontario steamer for Canada. These
-friendly white farmers had to hasten on for fear of detection, which
-meant terrible penalties. Thus it will be seen that the risks which
-their sympathy for the slave led them to take were very serious.
-
-It required large sums of money to keep this Underground Railway system
-in motion. The runaways must be fed, clothed, and their passage paid
-across the lake to Canada. Mr. Douglass was in the lecture-field most of
-the time to raise money to do his part. The Female Anti-Slavery Society,
-with its branches throughout the North, solicited funds and clothing,
-and, as these unfortunate fugitives were invariably destitute, means had
-to be supplied them until they could secure employment under the British
-flag.
-
-Besides William Still of Philadelphia, among colored people, Mr.
-Douglass had the active coöperation of Dr. James McCune Smith, of New
-York; Stephen J. Myers, of Albany; William Rich, of Troy, and Rev. J. W.
-Loguen, of Syracuse. Many others actively assisted in the work,
-including Charles Lennox Remond, William Whipper, of Philadelphia;
-Thomas L. Dorsey, Rev. Henry Highland Garnet, Anthony Barrier, of
-Brockport, N. Y., and Thomas Downing, of New York. There were not a few
-clashes with the law in efforts to capture and return escaping slaves,
-but only two or three such attempts were successful.
-
-Mr. Douglass’s home was always considered an asylum for runaways, and
-was constantly under the surveillance of the United States marshals;
-nevertheless, not a single fugitive, after reaching him, was ever
-apprehended and carried back. The majority of the escapes were made in
-winter, when the oversight on the plantation was less rigid than in the
-working-season, and many who were given passes during the Christmas
-holidays to visit neighboring towns or plantations, seized that
-opportunity for a longer journey.
-
-The western and southwestern branch of the Underground Railway was
-operated from Cincinnati, O., and through Michigan to Canada. Fugitive
-slaves from Kentucky, Tennessee, Mississippi, Arkansas, and Louisiana
-took this latter route. The whole number of slaves who successfully made
-their escape through the system has never been ascertained.
-
-The thousands of men, women, and children, white and black, who had a
-hand in conducting this Underground Railway were less concerned about
-the statistics of their dangerous work than they were with results. That
-the number of slaves set free by the operation of the system ran up into
-the thousands, was evident from the vast army of people in all parts of
-the North engaged in the work, and the constantly increasing colored
-population in the free-states and Canada. There was scarcely a day or
-night when some black man or woman did not defy the perils of the
-journey and elude the vigilance of the law to find free soil. So
-persistent were these enslaved people in running away from bondage that
-they excited not merely the sympathy but often the admiration of those
-not otherwise interested in their cause. The perils and adventures of
-these sombre fugitives stirred the blood and touched the heart. William
-Still’s volume of nearly eight hundred pages, contains a carefully kept
-record of the experiences of those runaways who came under the immediate
-observation and direction of the “Vigilance Committee” of the
-Pennsylvania Anti-Slavery Society. Their resourcefulness, cleverness,
-and daring revealed to the Northern people an unsuspected quality in the
-Negro character.
-
-The stories of these fugitives, told in their own simple-hearted way,
-and attested by the hardships that they had undergone, were, to those
-who heard them, a revelation of conditions in the South, of which they
-had hitherto known only at secondhand. They might still doubt the
-expediency of granting freedom to the slave but they could no longer
-question the sincerity of his desire for liberty and with that desire
-they were compelled to sympathize. As Douglass said: “Men were better
-than their theology, and truer to humanity than their politics or their
-offices.”
-
-The manner of Douglass’s flight—riding out of Baltimore and Maryland in
-daylight and in sight of those who knew that he was a slave—is a good
-illustration of the boldness and ingenuity of some of the escapes. Among
-the hundreds of interesting cases cited by Mr. Still is that of William
-Crafts, who gained his liberty by acting the part of a valet or
-body-servant of his wife. She was of light brown complexion, and for
-this adventure wore men’s clothing. Another case is that of a
-slave-woman who hitched up her master’s horse and carriage and, taking
-her family of five children and several others, drove off to liberty.
-Box Brown was the name of a slave, who permitted himself to be nailed up
-in a box and sent by express to Baltimore. Two colored women dressed
-themselves in deep mourning and rode Northward to freedom in the same
-coach as their masters, who did not know them. In some cases slaves
-secreted themselves for several months and, when search for them had
-ceased, crept off unsuspected. In hundreds of instances, the parts were
-as cleverly played as if the fugitives had had special training in the
-drama of running away from their masters. In nearly all cases these
-black men and women took desperate chances. The conductors of the
-Underground Railway were everywhere, and at all times on the alert. They
-knew every path, the byways and highways in which slaves might hide or
-on which they might travel to reach freedom. The stations were always
-ready and open to receive them. It was never too late, or too early, or
-too difficult, or too perilous to be on the lookout to welcome, protect,
-and pass on fugitives to the next place of safety. Clothing, food,
-shoes, carriages, wagons, horses, and mules were always at hand. No
-secret society has ever veiled its proceedings in deeper mystery than
-this widely separated army of determined conspirators and emancipators.
-The secret service men of the government tried to locate the stations
-and the station-agents, but the more they searched, the less they found.
-It is a curious fact that the United States secret service men seem to
-have had just as little success in uncovering the systematic plans for
-aiding slaves to escape to the Northern states as in preventing the
-smuggling of slaves from Africa into the Southern states. The traffic of
-the Underground Railroad continued to increase in volume and the slave
-once off United States soil was beyond reach or recall.
-
-Some of the men and women who were carrying on this clandestine work of
-delivering fugitives were people of much prominence. Among them were
-members of Congress, distinguished clergymen, editors, prominent
-merchants, doctors, lawyers, farmers, and tradesmen. From the
-slave-holders’ standpoint, the situation was not encouraging. They
-rightly felt that unless something effective were done to stop this
-increasing loss, slave-labor would cease to be profitable. This
-condition of things required a remedy, a remedy more far-reaching than
-any guaranteed the slave-holding system under the law then existing. To
-meet these attempts of the Abolitionists to undermine the system, the
-pro-slavery leaders deemed it just and necessary to extend the arm of
-national power to reclaim and carry back to bondage every slave who
-reached a free state in quest of liberty. The government that sanctioned
-slavery as a national institution; that acquired new territory for the
-extension of slavery; that derived a goodly part of its revenue from it,
-was bound, they believed, to do what was necessary to make slavery more
-secure. Until the Underground Railway began to do so large a business,
-there was thought to be enough law in the Constitution of the United
-States.[3]
-
-Footnote 3:
-
- As provided in Article IV, Section 2: “No person held to service in
- one state, under the laws thereof, escaping to another state, in
- consequence of any law or regulation therein, shall be discharged from
- such service or labor, but shall be delivered up on the claim of the
- party to whom such service or labor may be due,” supplemented by the
- statute giving force to its provisions in 1793.
-
-The constitutionality of this law had been fully upheld by the Supreme
-Court in what was known as the “Prigg case,” wherein Justice Story
-declared that it was self-executing, so that an owner could seize and
-carry away his runaway slave wherever he found him, providing he could
-do so without breach of the public peace. Those who desired and demanded
-more legal provisions for the better protection of slavery were in
-absolute power North and South. Daniel Webster of Massachusetts was as
-much in favor of it as Henry Clay of Kentucky and Calhoun of South
-Carolina; and in response to popular demand, the new Fugitive Slave Law
-was passed on September 10, 1850, as a part of the great Compromise
-Measures of that year.
-
-The instrument was most carefully drawn, and covered ten sections. Those
-who worked out its carefully-worded provisions had evidently studied the
-Underground System with considerable care, and this law was framed to
-meet the conditions that the railroad had created. Some of its main
-features were as follows:—
-
- A United States Commission and a United States court should have
- concurrent jurisdiction in disposing of cases of fugitive slaves
- brought before them.
-
- Any postmaster or clerk could be appointed a commissioner to hear
- cases under the law.
-
- A United States marshal was under penalty of $1,000 for refusing or
- neglecting to make an arrest when called upon to do so.
-
- Fugitive slaves could be arrested, with or without warrant and taken
- before a commissioner or judge, who was empowered to dispose of the
- case forthwith.
-
- If a fugitive escaped from a United States marshal, the latter could
- be sued on his bond and the full value of the slave recovered.
-
- There was a penalty of five years in prison or a fine of $5,000 for
- aiding or abetting a slave’s escape.
-
- The only proof needed was an affidavit by the alleged owner or some
- one acting in his behalf alleging right of property, escape or service
- due on escape, and a description of the person arrested, certified to
- by the magistrate.
-
- There were provisions for military aid for the United States marshal
- in case of resistance.
-
- The commissioner received a larger fee in case of extradition than he
- would obtain in case of discharge.
-
- The slave thus arrested could not testify in his own behalf and was
- not allowed a jury trial.
-
-The first effect of the law was to create a panic and stampede among the
-colored people of the free-states. It looked for awhile as if every
-Negro resident north of the Ohio had lost faith in the tenure of his own
-title to himself. There was wholesale emigration to Canada of colored
-people from every part of the United States. In his Life of Frederick
-Douglass, Mr. Holland gives an account of forty Negroes of Boston, who
-left home within three days after the Fugitive Slave Law was passed. The
-pastor of a colored church and his entire membership of 112 persons fled
-to British soil. A number of talented men who had done service in the
-anti-slavery cause, went to England. Mr. Douglass, who was in close
-touch with every movement, every fear, and every secret purpose of his
-people, says:
-
-“I was compelled to witness the terribly distressing effects of this
-cruel enactment; fugitive slaves, who had lived for many years safely
-and securely in western New York and elsewhere, some of whom by industry
-and economy had saved some money and bought little homes for themselves
-and their children, were suddenly alarmed and compelled to flee to
-Canada. Even colored people who had been free all their lives felt very
-insecure in their freedom, for under this law the oaths of any two
-villains were sufficient to confine a free man to slavery for life....
-Although I was now free myself, I was not without apprehension. My
-pardon was of doubtful validity, having been bought when out of
-possession of my owner, and when he must take what was given or not at
-all.... From rumors that reached me, my house was guarded by my friends
-several nights.”
-
-A much more serious consequence of the Fugitive Slave Law was the
-altogether unexpected feeling of resentment aroused in the North by its
-enforcement. There was abundant willingness among the Northern people
-that the slave-holders should have their slaves and that they should
-have everything needed to protect and make secure their property rights
-in them; but when it came to pressing unwilling citizens into the
-service of men who were hunting slaves, there was a very natural
-revulsion of sentiment. Just how intense was this feeling may best be
-illustrated in the history of three different cases that created
-wide-spread interest at the time. These were known respectively as the
-Burns, Shadrach, and Thomas Sims cases.
-
-Anthony Burns had made his escape from his master in Virginia and in
-1854 was living in Boston. In the month of May he was arrested under the
-provisions of the Fugitive Slave Law. At this particular time, Boston
-was aroused because of the passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Bill,
-repealing the Missouri Compromise, and thereby permitting the extension
-of slavery in the western territories. Burns was confined in the Boston
-court-house under strong guard. The people were in a mood to become
-profoundly interested in his case, which presented itself to them as an
-illustration of the cruelties of slavery and of the Fugitive Slave Law.
-Wendell Phillips, Theodore Parker, Richard A. Davis, Charles M. Ellis,
-Thomas Wentworth Higginson, and many others equally prominent, gave
-practical effect to this interest by securing a postponement of the
-hearing for a few days. In the meantime, a meeting was called in Faneuil
-Hall in which feeling ran high. While it was in progress, Colonel
-Higginson led in an attempt to rescue Burns. The door of the jail was
-battered in, the deputy was killed, and the Colonel and others were
-wounded. When the case came up for a hearing before Commissioner Loring,
-Burns had the best counsel that Boston could afford, but like all cases
-under the Fugitive Slave Law, there was no escape. After the formalities
-were complied with, he was ordered back to his master. When this
-decision became known, many houses were draped in black and so intense
-was the public feeling against it, that the government directed that
-Burns should be returned in a United States revenue cutter. He was
-escorted to the wharf by a strong guard and the streets were thronged
-with Boston citizens in a great state of excitement. There seemed to be
-no possible escape from a bloody riot. When the water-side was reached
-and an outbreak was imminent, a minister named Foster cried out, “Let us
-pray,” and with this call for prayer silence fell upon the excited
-throng; but the law had its way and Burns was sent back.
-
-The case of Shadrach was less exciting, but is interesting as presenting
-another and different view of the sentiment excited by the Fugitive
-Slave Law. He was a fugitive and a resident of Boston. He had been
-arrested in February, 1851, and during a postponement of his hearing
-before the United States Commissioner, the Boston Abolitionists rescued
-him and got him into Canada, the land of safety. The government
-officials in Washington took serious notice of this rescue of a United
-States prisoner and the uproar that followed seemed altogether out of
-proportion to the incident. Commenting on the excitement at the capital
-at this apparent determination of Boston to defy the national
-government, Mr. Garrison wrote:
-
-“The head and front of the offending in this instance—what is it? A
-sudden rush of a score or two of unarmed friends of equal liberty—an
-uninjurious deliverance of the oppressed out of the hands of the
-oppressor—the quiet transportation of a slave out of this slavery-ruled
-land to the free soil of Upper Canada ... a solitary slave in Boston is
-plucked as a brand from the burning, and forthwith a Cabinet Council is
-held and behold a menacing proclamation!”
-
-Senator Henry Clay was “horrified” and proposed an inquiry as to the
-expediency of passing an additional law making it a penal offense in the
-nature of treason for any one to interfere with the smooth and peaceful
-exercise of his pet measure in the Compromise Bill. Mr. Webster declared
-that the rescue of Shadrach was “strictly speaking” treason.
-
-Scarcely had the United States grand jury finished its examination of
-the Shadrach case when Boston was again in the midst of an excitement
-over the arrest and extradition of another fugitive slave, Thomas Sims.
-Profiting by the failure to send Shadrach back to his master, the
-officials had taken extraordinary precautions to prevent a rescue by mob
-or otherwise. The court-house where Sims was imprisoned was surrounded
-by chains and guarded by a large part of the city police force. As a
-further precaution, the state militia was called out and kept in
-readiness to quell a possible riot. A part of this soldiery furnished an
-escort all the way to Savannah, where the prisoner-slave was delivered
-safely.
-
-The bloody resistance on the part of runaways at Christiana, Pa., did
-more than anything else, in the opinion of Mr. Douglass, to put a check
-on the execution of the law. At this place three colored men were
-pursued by officers, and, when hard-pressed, turned about, shot, and
-killed a Mr. Gorsuch, wounded his son, drove back the officers, and then
-made their escape to Rochester, where they were rescued and given
-shelter in Mr. Douglass’s house. The latter, with his assistants,
-finally smuggled these fugitives to the Canadian shores, but in doing so
-he imperiled his own safety to a greater extent than ever before,
-because he was not only harboring fugitives from slavery, but fugitives
-from justice. After this experience, the law became a dead letter. It
-not only intended to put an end to the business of the Underground
-Railroad, but to make every community in some degree responsible for the
-return of runaway slaves, and it proved to be one of the most unpopular
-and irritating pieces of legislation enacted by the Federal Government.
-This act, more than any other one thing, increased opposition to
-slavery. Thousands of people who were either indifferent or hostile to
-the anti-slavery cause, flocked to the ranks of the Abolitionists when
-they saw what it meant and whither it was leading the nation. The
-language used by the leaders, both in their publications and on the
-stump, became more bitter and defiant.
-
-Mr. Douglass was always in the storm-centre of every movement to thwart
-the execution of this measure. He was in Boston, and in continuous
-conference with Theodore Parker, Higginson, Garrison, and others
-belonging to the “vigilance” committees. It was in these meetings that
-Douglass says he “got a peep into Parker’s soul.” He characterized him
-as “a man who shrank from no opportunity to do his full duty when man’s
-liberty was threatened.” Mr. Douglass’s thorough and comprehensive
-understanding of each succeeding change in the development of the
-slavery question was generally recognized by friend and foe. When he was
-invited by the members of the New York state legislature to address them
-on the subject, he was selected because no man then living could speak
-with a fuller knowledge of the great issue.
-
-Belonging to this period of increasing antagonism between pro-slavery
-and anti-slavery parties was the decision in the Dred Scott case. This,
-the Fugitive Slave Law, and the Kansas-Nebraska Bill, taken together,
-represent the sum of the conservative forces in the nation opposed to
-the Abolitionists and their cause. Douglass’s opinion of the situation,
-as it concerned himself and his people, is voiced in the following
-extract from an address delivered at New York in May, 1857:
-
-“I am myself not insensible to the many difficulties that beset us on
-every hand. They fling their broad and gloomy shadows across the pathway
-of every thoughtful colored man in this country. For one, I see them
-clearly and feel them sadly. Standing, as it were, barefoot, and
-treading upon the sharp and flinty rocks of the present, and looking out
-upon the boundless sea of the future, I have sought in my humble way to
-penetrate the intervening mists and clouds, and, perchance, to descry in
-the dim and shadowy distance the white flag of freedom.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X
- DOUGLASS, HARRIET BEECHER STOWE AND JOHN BROWN
-
-
-The anti-slavery agitation made and revealed some of the most notable
-characters in American history. As it grew in extent and intensity, it
-attracted to itself men and women gifted with the powers needed to force
-great issues to a conclusion. Those who were already in the struggle,
-like Mr. Douglass, became more strongly committed to it, and those who
-were not yet enlisted, but belonged to it by right of individual
-temperament and spiritual inheritance, hurriedly took their places in
-the foremost ranks of responsibility and action.
-
-There was no such thing as indifference in this matter. For those who
-understood the vast issue there were grave questions involved, and in
-some form or other the right or wrong of it knocked at the door of every
-one’s mind and conscience.
-
-To those who were sufficiently gifted to say and do anything great
-concerning this cause, the opportunity was now at hand. In the midst of
-the confusion and controversy, the public was ready to listen to some
-clear voice that would tell it the facts in regard to American slavery.
-
-Harriet Beecher Stowe responded to this need and was inspired to recite
-the story of the Negro in America. This she did with a mastery and a
-fascination that commanded the widest reading ever yet given to an
-American book. She so stirred the hearts of the Northern people that a
-large part of them were ready either to vote, or, in the last extremity,
-to fight for the suppression of slavery. The value of _Uncle Tom’s
-Cabin_ to the cause of Abolition can never be justly estimated.
-
-Mrs. Stowe was a member of the great Beecher family, and was by
-inheritance, as well as by special inspiration, peculiarly fitted to
-perform this service. She developed a concern in the slavery question in
-the natural course of her interest in all questions of the time. She
-lived for awhile in Cincinnati, where she was brought into close touch
-with some of the most cruel incidents of slavery,—the flight and capture
-of fugitives. Her sensitive nature was stung by seeing men hunted
-through the streets of the city, and carried back into bondage. She was
-near the scene when Birney’s anti-slavery press was destroyed by the
-mob. The whole atmosphere about her was surcharged with the spirit of
-the controversy, and the more she learned of the issue, the deeper
-became her interest in it. Stirred by sympathy for those whom she had
-come to regard as the victims of a bad system, she determined to know
-everything that was possible to be known about it.
-
-Crossing the Ohio River, Mrs. Stowe went down into the land of slavery,
-to study the institution at first hand. When she left the South and
-returned to New England with her husband, she saw and felt the evil as
-few in the North had ever seen and felt it.
-
-She soon discovered that the great mass of the Northern people were not
-able to share her views. She found most of them either indifferent or
-incredulous, and concluded that if they had had her experiences, they
-would also have her convictions. The immediate incentive to the writing
-of _Uncle Tom’s Cabin_ was the desire to arouse the national conscience
-and bring the people to a sense of their responsibility. This remarkable
-story first appeared in an anti-slavery newspaper, and proved so popular
-that it was soon issued in book form. The rapidity with which one
-edition after another was published and consumed at home and abroad, was
-without precedent. The Abolitionists were quick to recognize the story
-as the most powerful engine that had yet been employed against slavery.
-Frederick Douglass thus speaks of its influence:
-
-“Nothing could have better suited the moral and humane requirements of
-the hour. Its effect was amazing, instantaneous, and universal. She
-[Mrs. Stowe] at once became the object of interest and admiration the
-world over.”
-
-The author was not only concerned for the well-being of those who were
-enslaved in the South, but was also intensely interested in those who
-were already free in the North. She looked to Mr. Douglass as the most
-eminent representative of the Negro race in the free-states, and before
-sailing for England, whither she had been invited by the people, who
-were anxious to show her some honors for what she had done, asked him to
-her home in Andover, Mass. He gladly accepted the invitation, and, in
-his _Life and Times_, gives the following account of his visit:
-
-“I was received at her home with genuine cordiality. There was no
-contradiction between the author and her book. Mrs. Stowe appeared in
-conversation equally well as she appeared in her writing. She made to me
-a nice little speech in announcing her object in sending for me: ‘I have
-invited you here,’ she said, ‘because I wish to confer with you as to
-what can be done for the free colored people of the country. I am going
-to England and expect to have a considerable sum of money placed in my
-hands, and I intend to use it in some way for the permanent good of the
-colored people and especially for that class which has become free by
-their own exertions. In what way to do this most successfully is the
-subject which I wish to talk with you about. In any event I desire to
-have some monument rise after _Uncle Tom’s Cabin_, which shall show that
-it produced more than a transient influence.’”
-
-They discussed at some length the condition of his people in the
-Northern states, and as a result both concluded that there should be
-established an “Industrial College,” where colored people could learn
-some of the useful handicrafts,—to work in iron, wood and leather—and
-where a good plain English education could also be obtained. Their
-poverty kept them ignorant, and ignorance kept them degraded. Mrs. Stowe
-became so much interested in Mr. Douglass’s educational purposes that
-she asked him to submit his plans in writing, so that she could take
-them to England with her and show them to her friends. On his return to
-Rochester he elaborated his views, as she had requested. The plans were
-then shown to many of the leading Negroes who worked with him, and they
-very heartily approved. Later they were submitted to a convention of
-representative colored people in Rochester to receive the endorsement of
-that body. In this educational scheme, Mr. Douglass has given evidence
-of his understanding of the needs of the Negro in our generation, as
-well as of those in his own. The following is an extract from the
-statement which he sent to Mrs. Stowe in 1853:
-
- “The plan which I humbly submit in answer to this query is the
- establishment in Rochester, N. Y., or in some other part of the United
- States, equally favorable to such an enterprise, of an Industrial
- College in which shall be taught several important branches of the
- mechanic arts. This college shall be open to colored youth. I will
- pass over the details of such an institution as I propose.... Never
- having had a day’s schooling in all my life, I may not be expected to
- map out the details of a plan so comprehensive as that involved in the
- idea of a college. The argument in favor of an Industrial College, a
- college to be conducted by the best men and the best workmen which the
- mechanic arts can afford; where the colored youth can be instructed to
- use their hands, as well as their heads; where they can be put in
- possession of the means of getting a living, whether their lot in
- after-life may be cast among civilized or uncivilized men, whether
- they choose to stay here, or prefer to return to the land of their
- fathers, is briefly this: Prejudice against the free colored people in
- the North has nowhere shown itself so invincible as among mechanics.
- The farmer and the professional man cherish no feeling so bitter as
- that cherished by these. The latter would starve us out of the country
- entirely. At this moment I can more easily get my son into a lawyer’s
- office to study law than I can into a blacksmith’s shop to blow the
- bellows and to wield the sledge-hammer. Denied the means of learning
- the useful trades, we are pressed into the narrowest limits to obtain
- a livelihood. In times past we have been the hewers of wood and
- drawers of water for American society, and we once enjoyed a monopoly
- in menial employments, but this is so no longer. Even these
- employments are rapidly passing out of our hands. The fact is, that
- colored men must learn trades; must find new employments new modes of
- usefulness to society; or they must decay under the pressing wants to
- which their condition is rapidly bringing them.
-
- “We must become mechanics; we must build as well as live in houses; we
- must make as well as use furniture; we must construct bridges as well
- as pass over them, before we can properly live or be respected by our
- fellow-men. We need mechanics as well as ministers. We need workers in
- iron, clay, and leather. We have orators, authors, and other
- professional men, but these reach only a certain class, and get
- respect for our race in certain select circles. To live here as we
- ought, we must fasten ourselves to our countrymen through their
- every-day cardinal wants. We must not only be able to black boots, but
- to make them. At present, in the Northern states, we are unknown as
- mechanics. We give no proof of genius or skill at the county, state,
- or national fairs.
-
- “The fact that we make no show of our ability is held conclusive of
- _our inability to make any_, hence all the indifference and contempt
- with which incapacity is regarded fall upon us, and that too when we
- have had no means of disproving the infamous opinion of our natural
- inferiority. I have during the last dozen years denied before
- Americans that we are an inferior race, but this has been done by
- arguments based upon admitted principles rather than by the
- presentation of facts. Now, firmly believing as I do, that there are
- skill, invention, power, industry, and real mechanical genius among
- the colored people, which will bear favorable testimony for them, and
- which only need the means to develop them, I am decidedly in favor of
- the establishment of such a college as I have mentioned. The benefits
- of such an institution will not be confined to the Northern states nor
- to the free colored people. They would extend over the whole Union.
- The slave, not less than the freeman, would be benefited by such an
- institution. It must be confessed that the most powerful argument now
- used by the Southern slave-holder, and the one most soothing to his
- conscience, is that derived from the low condition of the free colored
- people of the North. I have long felt that too little attention has
- been given by our truest friends in this country, to removing this
- stumbling block out of the way of the slave’s liberation.
-
- “The most telling, the most killing refutation of slavery is the
- presentation of an industrious, enterprising, thrifty and intelligent
- free black population. Such a population I believe would rise in the
- Northern states under the fostering care of such a college as that
- proposed.
-
- “Allow me to say in conclusion that I believe every intelligent
- colored man in America will approve and rejoice at the establishment
- of some such institution as that now suggested. There are many
- respectable colored men, fathers of large families, having boys nearly
- grown, whose minds are tossed by night and by day with the anxious
- query, What shall I do with my boys? Such an institution would meet
- the wants of such persons. Then, too, the establishment of such an
- institution would be in character with the eminently practical
- philanthropy of your trans-Atlantic friends. America could scarcely
- object to it as an attempt to agitate the public mind on the subject
- of slavery, or to dissolve the Union. It could not be tortured into a
- cause for hard words by the American people, but the noble and good of
- all classes would see in the effort an excellent motive, a benevolent
- object temperately, wisely and practically manifested.”
-
-It would hardly be possible to show in any better way the far-reaching
-and prophetic character of the mind of Frederick Douglass. This letter
-indicates very plainly that even before General Armstrong had formulated
-his plan of academic and industrial education, before Hampton Institute,
-and long before Tuskegee Institute was thought of, Frederick Douglass
-saw the necessity for just such work as many of the industrial schools
-are doing in the South at the present time.
-
-It is thus most pleasant to have the name of Douglass linked with the
-cause of industrial education. He believed not only in academic and
-college training but also in agricultural and mechanical education.
-Hampton, Tuskegee and many other institutions are now putting his
-teachings into practice.
-
-While in England, Mrs. Stowe was made the object of much abuse by
-certain American newspapers, which accused her of obtaining British gold
-for her own use. Douglass, through the _North Star_, defended her
-vigorously against these charges, and the malicious were silenced. For
-reasons which he could not ascertain, the plans for the industrial
-school were never carried out, and, so far as is known, Mrs. Stowe never
-again took up the project with him.
-
-The period that discovered to America and the world Harriet Beecher
-Stowe, the writer of the Abolition movement, also revealed John Brown,
-the man of action. What Mrs. Stowe felt and wrote, John Brown attempted
-to carry into effect.
-
-Mr. Douglass’s relations with this man were more intimate and continuous
-than his associations with the author of _Uncle Tom’s Cabin_. No one
-could be a part of the anti-slavery movement between 1849 and 1859
-without knowing and being more or less influenced by the personality of
-John Brown. His opposition to slavery was like that of no other person.
-It was scarcely a compliment to him to say that he was highly regarded
-by the Abolitionists; their feeling toward him had in it more of awe
-than admiration. At all times he would rather fight than discuss
-slavery. He began to dislike it when he was twelve years of age. His
-business, his family, his patriotism were all subordinated to the one
-dominant purpose of hurling himself, and everybody else who would follow
-him, against the system. He would judge and estimate all persons by what
-they thought and felt about slavery. John Brown early formed an
-attachment for Douglass, being, in the beginning of his career, better
-known by the Negroes than by the white people. He mingled with them
-continually, hearing over and over again the stories, sometimes
-thrilling, sometimes pathetic, of a dawning desire for freedom, and soon
-learned to know almost everything about their condition. He became one
-of the most active conductors of the Underground Railway system.
-Douglass says that when the slaves mentioned the name of John Brown,
-they dropped their voices to a whisper, as if it were a sort of
-profanity to speak of him as they would of any one else.
-
-In 1847, Douglass received an urgent invitation from Brown to visit him
-at his home in Springfield, Mass. He responded to the call as if to a
-command, and he has given the following account of that visit:—
-
- “At the time to which I now refer, this man was a respectable merchant
- in a populous and thriving city, and our first place of meeting was at
- his store. A glance at the interior, as well as at the massive walls
- without, gave me the impression that the owner must be a man of
- considerable wealth. My welcome was all that I could have asked. Every
- member of the family, young and old, seemed glad to see me, and I was
- made at home in a very little while. I was, however, a little
- disappointed with the appearance of the house and its location. After
- seeing the fine store I was prepared to see a fine residence in an
- eligible locality, but this conclusion was completely dispelled by
- actual observation. It was a small wooden building on a back street,
- in a neighborhood chiefly occupied by laboring men and mechanics,
- respectable enough, to be sure, but not quite the place, I thought,
- one would look for the residence of a flourishing and successful
- merchant. Plain as was the outside of this man’s house, the inside was
- plainer. There was an air of plainness about it which almost suggested
- destitution. My first meal passed under the misnomer of tea, though
- there was nothing about it resembling the usual significance of that
- term. It consisted of beef-soup, cabbage and potatoes—a meal such as a
- man might relish after following the plough all day or performing a
- forced march, of a dozen miles, over a rough road in frosty weather.
- Innocent of paint, veneering, varnish, or table-cloth, the table
- announced itself unmistakably of pine and of the plainest workmanship.
- There was no hired help visible. The mother, daughters and sons did
- the serving, and did it well. They were evidently used to it, and had
- no thought of any impropriety or degradation in being their own
- servants. Everything implied stern truth, solid purpose, and rigid
- economy. I was not long in company with the master of this house
- before I discovered that he was indeed the master of it, and was
- likely to become mine too, if I stayed long enough with him. He
- fulfilled St. Paul’s idea of the head of the family. His wife believed
- in him, and his children obeyed him with reverence. Whenever he spoke,
- his words commanded earnest attention. His arguments, which I ventured
- at some points to oppose, seemed to convince all; his appeals touched
- all, and his will impressed all. Certainly I never felt myself in the
- presence of a stronger religious influence than while in this man’s
- house.
-
- “In person he was lean, strong, and sinewy, of the best New England
- mold, built for times of trouble, and fitted to grapple with the
- flintiest hardships. Clad in plain American woolen, shod in boots of
- cowhide leather, and wearing a cravat of the same substantial
- material, under six feet high, less than 150 pounds in weight, aged
- about fifty years, he presented a figure straight and symmetrical as a
- mountain pine. His bearing was singularly impressive. His head was not
- large but compact and high. His hair was coarse, his strong spare
- mouth, supported by a broad and prominent chin. His eyes were bluish
- gray, and in conversation they were full of light and fire. When on
- the street, he moved with a long springing race-horse step, absorbed
- by his own reflections, neither seeking nor shunning observation. Such
- was the man whose name I heard in whispers; such was the spirit of his
- house and family; such was the house in which he lived; and such was
- Captain John Brown, whose name has now passed into history, as that of
- one of the most marked characters and greatest heroes known to
- American fame.
-
- “After the strong meal described, Brown cautiously approached the
- subject which he wished to bring to my attention; for he seemed to
- apprehend opposition to his views. He denounced slavery in look and
- language fierce and bitter; he thought that slave-holders had
- forfeited their right to live, that the slaves had a right to gain
- their liberty in any way they could; did not believe that moral
- suasion would ever liberate a slave, or that political action would
- abolish the system. He said that he had long had a plan which could
- accomplish this end, and he had invited me to his house to lay that
- plan before me. He said that he had been for some time looking for
- colored men to whom he could safely reveal his secret, and at times he
- had almost despaired of finding such men; but that now he was
- encouraged, because he saw heads of such rising in all directions. He
- had observed my course at home and abroad, and he wanted my
- coöperation. His plan, as it then lay in his mind, had much to commend
- it. It did not, as some suppose, contemplate a general rising among
- the slaves, and a general slaughter of the slave-masters. An
- insurrection, he thought, would only defeat the object; but his plan
- did contemplate the creating of an armed force which should act in the
- very heart of the South. He was not averse to the shedding of blood,
- and thought the carrying of firearms would be a good rule for the
- colored people to adopt, as it would give them a sense of their
- manhood. No people, he said, could have self-respect, or be respected,
- who would not fight for their freedom. He called my attention to the
- map of the United States. ‘These mountains,’ he said, ‘are the basis
- of my plan. God has given the strength of the hills to freedom; they
- were placed here for the emancipation of the Negro race; they are full
- of natural forts, where one man for defense will be equal to a hundred
- for attack; they are full also of good hiding places, where large
- numbers of brave men could be concealed, and baffle and elude pursuit
- for a long time. I know these mountains well, and could take a body of
- men into them and keep them there, in spite of all the efforts of
- Virginia to dislodge them. The true object to be sought is first of
- all to destroy the money value of slave-property; and that can only be
- done by rendering such property insecure. My plan, then, is to take,
- at first, about twenty-five picked men, and begin on a small scale;
- supply them with arms and ammunition and post them in squads of fives
- on a line of twenty-five miles. The most persuasive and judicious of
- these shall go down to the fields from time to time, as opportunity
- offers, and induce the slaves to join them, seeking and selecting the
- most reckless and daring.’”
-
-From this time on the relationship between these two Abolitionists grew
-in intimacy and thereafter Mr. Douglass’s Rochester home was John
-Brown’s headquarters whenever he was in that part of the country.
-
-In the Springfield conference, he related his daring plans for the
-rescue of the slaves in Virginia. Mr. Douglass readily saw how
-impracticable and certain of disastrous failure this project must be,
-but John Brown could never be made to understand the peril of anything
-that he thought it was right to do. The possibility of failure seemed
-never to enter into his calculations. Mr. Douglass said to him at
-Springfield:
-
-“Suppose you succeed in running off a few slaves, and thus impress the
-Virginia slave-holders with a sense of insecurity in their slaves, the
-effect will be only to make them sell their slaves further South.”
-
-Whereupon Captain Brown replied: “That will be just what I want first to
-do; then I would follow them up. If we could drive them out of one
-county it would be a great gain; it would weaken the system throughout
-the state.”
-
-“But,” said Douglass, “they would employ blood-hounds to hunt you out of
-the mountains.”
-
-“That they might attempt,” was the answer, “but the chances are that we
-should whip them, and when we should have whipped one squad, they would
-be careful how they pursued us.”
-
-Thus would Brown confidently meet all possible obstacles to his plan of
-invasion. If any other man had urged such views about freeing the slaves
-with a force of less than one hundred men in the Virginia mountains, he
-would have been regarded as ridiculous; but John Brown was an advocate
-of such intensity of faith and readiness to put himself in front of
-every danger, that it required no little courage to oppose him.
-
-Mr. Douglass was evidently much affected by this interview. He had never
-before seen courage and self-confidence so imperious, or a determination
-to do something large and terrible so absolutely regardless of
-consequences. After this conference he admits that his own “utterances
-became more and more tinged by the color of this man’s strong
-impressions,” and his conviction grew “that slavery could only end in
-blood.”
-
-Brown’s influence was easily traceable in Mr. Douglass’s subsequent
-utterances, both in the _North Star_ and in his public addresses. During
-the fight for free soil and free men in Kansas, after the
-Kansas-Nebraska bill became a law, Mr. Douglass probably did more than
-any one to supply the militant captain with money and munitions. The
-full size of Brown as a man was revealed in Kansas when the struggle
-between pro-slavery and anti-slavery forces became actual war. His
-daring deeds in going into the state of Missouri, bringing out dozens of
-slaves and conducting them safely to the North; and his fight to keep
-Kansas free, could not have succeeded, but for the support of such men
-as Frederick Douglass. Captain Brown’s experiences and adventures here
-strengthened his conviction that his plans for the invasion of Virginia
-were right. He had studied the mountain ranges and was satisfied in his
-own mind that the “Almighty had raised those mountains for the very
-purpose of aiding him to strike a death blow to slavery.” The
-correspondence between the two men continued and the black leader was
-well informed of every movement. Brown never ceased to urge the ex-slave
-to join him, both in drawing up a constitution for future use and in the
-actual fighting. Indeed he had so exalted an opinion of Douglass’s
-influence that it was believed the slaves in Virginia and other parts of
-the South would rise _en masse_ if they knew that he was a part of this
-rescuing army.
-
-About three weeks before the assault at Harper’s Ferry, while John Brown
-was at Chambersburg, making final arrangements for his attack, he sent
-an urgent letter to Douglass, begging a conference. The latter knew that
-this was a perilous step and would certainly implicate him in the
-conspiracy when the crash of failure came; yet he ignored the danger and
-responded. He speaks of this last visit to the old warrior, in part, as
-follows:
-
-“I approached the old quarry with a good deal of caution, for John Brown
-was generally armed and regarded strangers with suspicion. He was there
-under ban of the government and heavy rewards were offered for his
-arrest for several offenses which he is said to have committed in
-Kansas. He was then passing under the name of John Smith. As I came near
-him, he regarded me rather suspiciously, but soon recognized me and
-received me cordially. He had in his hand, when I met him, fishing
-tackle, with which he had been fishing in a stream hard by, but I saw no
-fish.... The fishing was simply a disguise and was certainly a good one.
-He looked in every way like a man of the neighborhood and as much at
-home as any of the farmers around there. His hat was old and
-storm-beaten and his clothing was about the color of the quarry itself,
-his present dwelling-place. His face wore an anxious expression and he
-was much worn by exposure. I felt that I was on a dangerous mission and
-was as little desirous of discovery as himself.”
-
-Captains Brown, Kage, Shields Green and Mr. Douglass sat down to hold a
-council of war. The whole scheme of the proposed attack on Harper’s
-Ferry and its capture was gone over without the slightest hint of
-possible failure. Douglass opposed the plan as wholly impracticable and
-fatal to all who might engage in it, but his arguments were promptly set
-aside by Brown. “He was not to be shaken by anything I could say, but
-treated my views respectfully. The debate continued during Saturday and
-Sunday. Brown was for striking a blow that would arouse the country, and
-I, for the policy of gradually and secretly drawing off the slaves to
-the mountains, as at first suggested by Brown himself.” In the most
-fervent manner he urged Mr. Douglass to remain and take part in the
-fight. Just before the latter’s departure, Brown threw his arm around
-the black man’s neck and said: “Come with me, Douglass! I will defend
-you with my life. I want you for a special purpose. When I strike, the
-bees will begin to swarm, and I shall want you to help hive them.”
-
-The colored leader did not yield to the entreaty. Brown was incapable of
-seeing the death-trap that he had set for himself and his followers, and
-even if he could have seen it, he would not have been moved from his
-determination. A thousand men might have followed him and all have
-perished, but there could have been but one martyr, and that was
-himself. Mr. Douglass’s death would have been a wanton sacrifice,
-because it would have meant nothing to the cause for which he had
-contributed so much of his life during the previous twenty-five years.
-He had a right to feel, as his subsequent career so abundantly proved,
-that his work was not finished. Of all the Abolitionists he was the only
-one who followed Brown to the last with advice, money, and other
-assistance. Because of what he had already done, and especially in this
-final conference at Chambersburg, he became amenable, as afterward
-appeared, to the charge of treason.
-
-When the news was flashed over the land that John Brown was captured,
-the whole country was thrown into a state of great excitement. In
-Virginia the conclusion was quickly reached that the raid was backed by
-a wide-spread conspiracy and that men high in rank were implicated. Mr.
-Douglass at the time was addressing a large audience in Philadelphia. If
-he had any fear for himself, he did not show it. By lingering in the
-state so near the borders of slavery, where he had just been in
-conference with the head and front of the movement, he was in imminent
-danger. Brown’s satchel, now in the hands of the officials, contained
-much of Douglass’s correspondence. His friends were apprehensive and
-insisted upon his immediate flight from Philadelphia to his home in
-Rochester, and thence to Canada. As a matter of precaution, the
-following telegram was sent by his friend, Miss Assing, to Rochester:
-
-“B. F. Blackall, Esq.: Tell Lewis [Douglass’s eldest son] to secure all
-the important papers in my desk.”
-
-All the newspapers stated that the Federal Government would spare no
-pains to run down and arrest every one who was in any way connected with
-the conspiracy. It would have been gratifying to those in power to have
-laid hands on Frederick Douglass and to have made an example of him,
-because he was regarded as one of the most offensive of those who fought
-slavery. That his friends were not unduly anxious for his safety is also
-proven by the following copy of a letter signed by the Governor of
-Virginia and sent to the President:
-
- “(Confidential.)
-
- “RICHMOND, VA., NOV. 13, 1859.
-
- “_To His Excellency, James Buchanan, President of the United States,
- and to the Honorable Postmaster-General of the United States_:
-
-“GENTLEMEN:—I have information such as has caused me, upon proper
-affidavits, to make requisition upon the Executive of Michigan for the
-delivery up of the person of Frederick Douglass, a Negro man, supposed
-now to be in Michigan, charged with murder, robbery, and inciting
-servile insurrection in the State of Virginia. My agents for the arrest
-and reclamation of the person so charged, are Benjamin M. Morris and
-William N. Kelly. The latter has the requisition and will wait on you to
-the end of obtaining nominal authority as post-office agents. They need
-to be very secretive in this matter, and some pretext for traveling
-through this dangerous section for the execution of the laws in this
-behalf, and some protection against obtrusive, unruly, or lawless
-violence. If it be proper to do so, will the Postmaster-General be
-pleased to give to Mr. Kelly, for each of these men, a permit and
-authority to act as detectives for the Post-office Department, without
-pay, but to pass and repass without question, delay, or hindrance?
-
- “Respectfully submitted,
- “By your obedient servant,
- “HENRY A. WISE.”
-
-Mr. Douglass was fairly pushed into Canada by his friends, but the
-determination to get hold of him was so strong that he was not regarded
-as safe even there. It would not have been impossible to effect some
-plan for arresting him so long as he remained so close to his native
-land. It was decided therefore that he must again go to England. He had
-already planned this trip, but the interesting events that culminated in
-the Harper’s Ferry tragedy had delayed his departure.
-
-Mr. Douglass stated publicly that he would be perfectly willing to be
-tried anywhere in New York State, but not elsewhere. He took passage for
-England from Quebec on the 12th day of November, 1859, and was
-everywhere received with the old-time cordiality. As he was fresh from
-the scenes and events that had stirred the English almost as much as the
-American people, he was in great demand for more complete information.
-He had occasion to deliver many addresses and it was everywhere manifest
-that he had lost none of his former prestige. The only setback he
-suffered was when he applied to George M. Dallas, the American Minister
-to the Court of St. James, for a passport for the purpose of visiting
-Paris. He was refused on the ground that he was not a citizen of the
-United States. His visit was cut short by the distressing news of the
-death of his beloved little daughter, Anna, the delight and life of his
-home, his absence having covered only five months. He returned to find
-the public temper toward him mollified by the swift happenings of a
-season which was marked by incessant change in the currents of popular
-feeling.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI
- FOREBODINGS OF THE CRISIS
-
-
-The ten years from 1850 to 1860 were years of cumulative danger to the
-republic and to the principles of liberty and democracy upon which it
-was founded. For the Negro these years contained more of perils than of
-hopes. The great historical events growing out of the conflict between
-the pro-slavery and the anti-slavery parties appeared to have set the
-goal of emancipation ever farther out of the range of practical
-possibilities. The Fugitive Slave Law seemed for a time to put an end to
-all hopes for further rescues from bondage. The Dred Scott Decision made
-every Negro, free or slave, an outlaw. The Kansas-Nebraska Bill
-threatened to render slavery so thoroughly national that Abolition would
-be forever impossible. Finally, the John Brown raid intensified, for a
-time, the hatred toward the colored people and their friends in the
-North.
-
-But the success of the pro-slavery party was more apparent than real. It
-had gained merely a tactical victory. All the deeper currents of the
-nation’s life were running counter to it. The raid excited the horror of
-the people. Even men active as Abolitionists denounced the acts of John
-Brown as both foolhardy and wicked. It seemed for a time that every one
-prominent in social and political life in the North was anxious publicly
-to disavow all share in what was described as a “reckless and fanatical”
-deed. But John Brown’s raid did not bring the people of the North and
-South any nearer together. On the contrary, it merely widened the breach
-between them. The North might disclaim this act, but the people of the
-opposite section were not satisfied with these disclaimers. It seemed to
-them that behind John Brown was a great conspiracy, and that the North,
-having determined to make a nullity of the Fugitive Slave Law, was
-preparing to follow it up with still more daring efforts to free the
-slaves at any cost.
-
-Brown was hurried to the gallows, but not before an effort was made to
-implicate in his crime men who were prominent as Abolitionists. It has
-already been shown what steps were taken to capture Frederick Douglass.
-A Congressional committee was appointed for the purpose of thoroughly
-investigating the whole matter, but it accomplished nothing. It is
-scarcely necessary to say that the death of Brown produced an impression
-throughout the country quite as profound as that already created by his
-“raid.” The execution changed public sentiment at once. People now began
-to feel and to say that the cause, and not the man, had been on trial
-when he was found guilty. The sentence of death passed by the Virginia
-court transformed Brown in the eyes of a great many Northern people into
-a martyr and shed a halo over the cause for which he gave his life.
-Emerson compared the gallows of Virginia to the cross in Palestine. All
-through the North the people began to sing the song that continued to be
-a favorite throughout the Civil War:
-
- “John Brown’s body lies a-mouldering in the grave,
- But his soul is marching on.”
-
-The panic-stricken friends of freedom recovered their spirits and
-renewed their attacks with increased vigor. To quote from Frederick
-Douglass: “John Brown’s defeat was already assuming the form of victory,
-and his death was giving new life and power to the principles of justice
-and liberty. What he had lost by the sword, he had more than gained by
-the truth.”
-
-The people of the South all through this controversy had shown
-themselves correct interpreters of public sentiment. They clearly saw
-that the execution of John Brown did not put an end to the cause of
-Abolition. This reckless act of invasion was merely typical of what was
-possible on a scale of vaster proportions. In spite of everything that
-had been achieved by law and by decisions of the Supreme Court, the
-trend of feeling in the North was steadily against slavery. In spite of
-the Fugitive Slave Law and an increasing vigilance on the part of
-masters and their agents, the Underground Railroad continued its
-business of carrying slave-property to free soil. Charles Sumner’s
-speech in the Senate added fresh interest to the cause of emancipation,
-and the continued popularity of _Uncle Tom’s Cabin_ was ominous. All
-these disquieting circumstances boded some dreadful issue of the
-controversy. The drift of events is best exhibited in the effects of the
-Kansas-Nebraska Bill, already referred to. When this bill became a law,
-as the consummation of the policy of Senator Stephen A. Douglas of
-Illinois, the physical boundary between slavery and freedom, which many
-had supposed to be fixed as firmly as the Declaration of Independence,
-was swept away and all the vast empire of the west and northwest became
-disputed ground between the forces of free soil and slavery. This act
-gave effect to the new doctrines of state sovereignty. Whatever may have
-been its purpose, the result was to unite the forces of the North and
-South, pitting the two sections against each other in a struggle for
-supremacy in the new territory. In outward appearance this new doctrine
-was peaceful and sound, but it held dreadful possibilities. Expressed
-plainly, the Kansas-Nebraska Law said that whether these new states
-should be free or slave-states must be left to the people. It was for
-them to vote slavery “up” or “down.” In other words, if the majority of
-the people of these territories voted for slavery, it became, by their
-sovereign will, an institution fixed and irrevocable; if not, slavery
-was forever to be shut out, just as it was excluded from Massachusetts.
-
-The intensity of public interest in and anxiety for the future status of
-these new states was shown in the instant rush into Kansas from New
-England of colonists favorable to the cause of free soil, and from the
-South of colonists favorable to the cause of slavery. Each side
-appreciated how momentous was the issue. The people of Missouri and
-other neighboring slave-states knew that it would be difficult, with a
-free state adjoining them to hold their bond-servants in security. The
-people of New England and other Northern states understood that the
-political supremacy of the free-states would be forever lost if the
-South were able to make slave-ground out of the western territory.
-
-It was an exciting contest and soon proved a gory one. Men from both
-sections were expecting that the struggle would be attended with
-bloodshed and they went out armed and prepared for it. Kansas, “bleeding
-Kansas,” was a battle-ground. It is not necessary here to recount the
-sanguinary incidents between the cohorts of emancipation and slavery in
-this neutral territory. Suffice it to say that in the end the cause of
-free soil triumphed and the contest was merely preliminary to a vaster
-conflict of which it was a premonitory token.
-
-Before and during these stormy events in Kansas, there was in progress
-an intellectual conflict which was destined to have a more serious
-ending. This was the historic debates between Abraham Lincoln and
-Stephen A. Douglas, both of Illinois. More clearly, perhaps than any
-other one event, this round of speeches formulated the issue which
-divided the American people politically on the question of slavery. It
-revealed to the nation a man who gave to them, for the first time, a
-frank and clear-cut definition of the issue to which it had been brought
-by the struggle. Lincoln said in effect: “The Union cannot long endure,
-half-slave and half-free. It must be all one or all the other, and the
-public mind can find no resting-place but in the ultimate extinction of
-slavery.”
-
-Of course, this was but a reiteration of what had been repeatedly said
-by the Abolitionists during the past twenty-five years, but coming now
-at a time when there was an unconscious groping of the popular mind
-toward a definite issue for public action, these clear words seemed to
-be charged with meaning of tremendous importance. The people of the
-whole country listened to these Illinois debaters with an interest that
-seemed prescient of coming events. As the debate progressed, Mr. Lincoln
-seemed to rise visibly and steadily from the western provincial
-obscurity he had lived in up to this point, to a prominence in which he
-appeared for the time to overshadow every one else who had spoken on the
-great question. The immediate prize to be won in the debate was a seat
-in the United States Senate; but before its close, this sank into
-insignificance, and the presidency of the United States, the
-preservation of the Union, and the fate of slavery, had become the
-stakes of the contest.
-
-The issues in the coming election already began to shape themselves
-along the lines enunciated by Mr. Lincoln and Senator Douglas. In due
-time new political alignments were completed as follows:
-
-(1) The pro-slavery and Union Democrats of the North stood for state
-sovereignty, or the right of the people of a territory to admit or bar
-slavery as they saw fit. Senator Douglas was the unquestioned leader of
-this wing of the Democratic party.
-
-(2) The pro-slavery people of the South stood for the bold declaration
-that the Constitution of its own force gave the right to carry slaves
-into any territory of the United States and to hold them there, with or
-without the consent of the people of the territory. John C. Breckinridge
-was the leader of the Southern wing of the Democracy.
-
-(3) Abraham Lincoln was chosen to bear the standard of all the people
-who were opposed to both varieties of pro-slavery Democrats. His
-doctrine was that the Federal Government had the right to exclude
-slavery from the territories of the United States, and that this right
-and power ought to be exercised to keep slavery within the confines of
-the then existing slave-states.
-
-It will be seen that emancipation was not an issue on the surface of
-these declarations of principles. The whole question appeared to be:
-Shall slavery have the power of expansion? If this power were denied,
-could there be any doubt as to what must ultimately follow? If the
-people feared the power of slavery to such an extent that they would or
-could keep it within a restricted territory, would not this principle,
-when successful, be the first step toward its extirpation? The South
-more clearly than the North understood that the triumph of Mr. Lincoln
-would settle nothing. Beneath these platform utterances was the
-unwritten issue: Slavery’s security of expansion, or its “ultimate
-extinction.” If the South won in the impending contest, not only would
-slavery be secured by the right of its extension into the undivided
-territory west of the Mississippi, but political supremacy might pass
-permanently from the free-states.
-
-The position of Stephen A. Douglas and his followers was rather
-anomalous. As the Senator at one time expressed it, he cared not whether
-the question of extending slavery into the territories was “voted up or
-voted down”; with him the important thing seemed to be that the people
-of the new territory should have the opportunity to vote on the question
-and decide for themselves the character of their institutions.
-
-Mr. Lincoln’s followers represented nearly everything left of the spirit
-that was glorified in the Declaration of Independence and the Revolution
-of 1776. Those who would preserve the soil of the West free; those who
-would not only restrict, but abolish slavery altogether; and those who
-would endow the Negro with all the proclaimed natural rights of man,
-supported Lincoln.
-
-The situation was complicated as well as perilous. Heretofore, when the
-only question between the North and the South was slavery or the right
-to hold slaves, the people of the North were governed as much by their
-racial prejudices as the Southern people. Now, however, when other
-questions, incidental to slavery, as, for instance, the future political
-supremacy, were involved with the main issue, many men and women, who
-had heretofore been indifferent or silent, became actively concerned,
-and felt impelled to take a definite stand. There seems never to have
-been any possibility of the North and South going to war on account of
-Negro slavery. It was at this time clear from the whole history of the
-controversy that if the Negro were ever to be free, his freedom must
-come as a consequence and not as the cause of a conflict.
-
-Probably no man in public life saw this more clearly than Frederick
-Douglass. He was just as much a part of the history in the process of
-making, all about him, as he was permitted to be. He had his say and was
-heard. He understood the trend of events and he was not swept away by
-merely transitory incidents. In all this controversy he sought
-constantly, in his speeches, and in his paper, _Douglass’s Monthly_, to
-lift into clear view the paramount issue. The following extract from one
-of his speeches indicates the clearness with which he saw, and the
-definiteness with which he was able to foreshadow the events of the next
-succeeding years:
-
-“The only choice left to this nation is abolition or destruction. You
-must abolish slavery or abandon the Union. It is plain that there can
-never be any union between the North and South, while the South values
-slavery more than nationality. A union of interests is essential to a
-union of ideas and without this union of ideas, the outer form of union
-will be but as a rope of sand.”
-
-During the Illinois debates, Frederick Douglass did all he could to
-enforce the arguments and extend the steadily growing influence of Mr.
-Lincoln. He made an extensive campaign in Michigan, Wisconsin, and Iowa.
-His audiences were large and interested, being eager to hear any man who
-could speak with the distinction, clearness, and frankness that
-characterized his public utterances. He had grown in esteem and the
-mob-spirit that tried to harass him in his earlier campaigns in the West
-had given way before his increasing influence and popularity. Once in
-Illinois he met Senator Douglas, who treated him with marked courtesy.
-
-In 1854, Frederick Douglass delivered an address in Chicago which ranks
-as one of his greatest orations. Frederick May Holland, who has already
-been referred to as the author of a valuable biography of the Negro
-leader, has given to the public, for the first time, I believe, nearly
-all of this interesting speech. The reproduction of at least a part of
-it seems essential to this chapter:
-
- “The Constitution knows no man by the color of his skin. The men who
- made it were too noble for any such limitation of humanity and human
- rights. The term ‘white’ is a modern term in the legislation of this
- country. It was never used in the better days of our republic, but has
- sprung up within the period of our national degeneracy.
-
- “I am here simply as an American citizen, having a stake in the weal
- or woe of the nation in common with other citizens. I am not here as
- the agent of any sect or party. Parties are too politic and sects are
- too sectarian, to select one of my odious class and of my radical
- opinions, at this important time and place, to represent them.
- Nevertheless, I do not stand alone here. There are noble-minded men in
- Illinois who are neither ashamed of their cause nor their company.
- Some of them are here to-night, and I expect to meet them in every
- part of the state where I may travel.
-
- “But, I pray, hold no man or party responsible for my words, for I am
- no man’s agent, and I am no party’s agent.... It is alleged that I
- came here in this state to insult Senator Douglas. Among gentlemen
- that is only an insult that is intended to be such, and I disavow all
- such intention. I am here precisely as I was in this state one year
- ago—with no other change in my relations to you, or the great question
- of human freedom, than time and circumstances have brought about. I
- shall deal with the same subject with the same spirit now as then,
- approving such men and such measures as look to the security of
- liberty in the land and with my whole heart condemning such men and
- measures as serve to subvert or endanger it. If Hon. S. A. Douglas,
- your beloved and highly gifted senator, has designedly or through
- mistaken notions of public policy, ranged himself on the side of
- oppressors, and the deadliest enemies of liberty, I know of no reason,
- either in this world or in any other world, which should prevent me or
- any one else, from thinking so or saying so.
-
- “The people in whose cause I came here to-night are not among those
- whose right to regulate their own domestic concerns is so feelingly,
- and earnestly, and eloquently contended for in certain quarters. They
- have no Stephen A. Douglas, no General Cass, to contend at North
- Market Hall for their popular sovereignty. They have no national
- purse, no offices, no reputation with which to corrupt Congress, or to
- tempt men, mighty in eloquence and influence into their service. Oh,
- no! They have nothing to commend them, but their unadorned humanity.
- They are human—that’s all—only human. Nature owns them as human; but
- men own them as property, and only as property. Every right of human
- nature, as such, is denied them; they are dumb in their chains. To
- utter one groan or scream for freedom in the presence of the Southern
- advocate of popular sovereignty, is to bring down the frightful lash
- upon their quivering flesh. I know this suffering people; I am
- acquainted with their sorrows; I am one with them in experience; I
- have felt the lash of the slave-driver, and stand up here with all the
- bitter recollections of its horrors vividly upon me.
-
- “There are special reasons why I should speak and speak freely. The
- right of speech is a very precious one. I understand that Mr. Douglas
- regards himself as the most abused man in the United States; and that
- the greatest outrage ever committed upon him was in the case in which
- your indignation raised your voices so high that he could not be
- heard. No personal violence, as I understand, was offered him. It
- seems to have been a trial of vocal powers between the individual and
- the multitude; and as might have been expected, the voice of one man
- was not equal in volume to the voices of five thousand. I do not
- mention this circumstance to approve it; I do not approve it. I am for
- free speech, as well as free men and free soil; but how ineffably
- insignificant is this wrong done in a single instance, compared to the
- stupendous iniquity perpetrated against more than three millions of
- the American people, who are struck dumb by the very men in whose
- cause Mr. Senator Douglas was here to plead! While I would not approve
- the silencing of Mr. Douglas, may we not hope that this slight
- abridgment of his rights, may lead him to respect in some degree the
- rights of other men, as good in the eye of Heaven as himself?
-
- “Let us now consider the great question of the age, the only great
- national question which seriously agitates the public mind at this
- hour. It is called the vexed question, and excites alarm in every
- quarter of the country.
-
- “The proposition to repeal the Missouri Compromise, was a stunning
- one. It fell upon the nation like a bolt from a cloudless sky. The
- thing was too startling for belief. You believed in the South and you
- believed in the North; and you knew that the repeal of the Missouri
- Compromise was a breach of honor; and therefore, you said that the
- thing could not be done. Besides both parties had pledged themselves
- directly, positively, and solemnly against reopening in Congress the
- agitation on the subject of slavery; and the President himself had
- declared his intention to maintain the national quiet. Upon these
- assurances you rested and rested fatally. But you should have learned
- long ago that men do not gather grapes of thorns or figs of thistles.
- It is folly to put faith in men who have broken faith with God. When a
- man has brought himself to enslave a child of God, to put fetters on
- his brother, he has qualified himself to disregard the most sacred of
- compacts; beneath the sky there is nothing more sacred than man, and
- nothing can be properly respected when manhood is despised and
- trampled upon.
-
- “It is said that slavery is the creature of positive law, and that it
- can only exist where it is sustained by positive law—that neither in
- Kansas nor Nebraska is there any law establishing slavery, and that
- therefore, the moment a slave-holder carries his slaves into these
- territories, he is free and restored to the rights of human nature.
- This is the ground taken by General Cass. He contended for it in the
- North Market Hall, with much eloquence and skill. I thought, while I
- was hearing him on this point, that slave-holders would not be likely
- to thank him for the argument. It is not true that slavery cannot
- exist without being established by positive law. The instance cannot
- be shown where a law was ever made establishing slavery, where the
- relation of master and slave did not previously exist. The law is
- always an after-coming consideration. Wicked men first overpower and
- subdue their fellow-men to slavery, and then call in the law to
- sanction the deed. Even in the slave-states of America, slavery has
- never been established by law. It was not established under the
- colonial charters of the original states, nor the Constitution of the
- United States. It is now and has always been a system of lawless
- violence. On this proposition I hold myself ready and willing to meet
- any defender of the Nebraska bill. I would not hesitate to meet even
- the author of that bill himself.
-
- “He says he wants no broad, black line across this continent. Such a
- line is odious, and begets unkind feelings between the citizens of a
- common country. Now, fellow citizens, why is the line of thirty-six
- degrees, thirty minutes, a broad black line? What is it that entitles
- it to be called a black line? It is the fashion to call whatever is
- odious in this country, black. You call the devil black, and he may
- be; but what is there in the line of thirty-six degrees, thirty
- minutes, which makes it blacker than the line which separates Illinois
- from Missouri or Michigan from Indiana? I can see nothing in the line
- itself which should make it black or odious. It is a line, that’s all.
- It is black, black and odious, not because it is a line, but because
- of the things it separates. If it keep asunder what God has joined
- together, or separate what God intended should be fused, then it may
- be called an odious line, a black line; but if, on the other hand, it
- marks only a distinction natural and eternal, a distinction fixed in
- the nature of things by the eternal God, then I say, withered be the
- arm and blasted be the hand that would blot it out.
-
- “Nothing could be further from the truth, then, to say that popular
- sovereignty is accorded to the people who may settle the territories
- of Kansas and Nebraska. The three great cardinal powers of government
- are the executive, legislative and judicial. Are these powers sacred
- to the people of Kansas and Nebraska? You know they are not. That bill
- places the people of that territory, as completely under the powers of
- the Federal government as Canada is under British rule. By this
- Kansas-Nebraska Bill, the Federal government has the substance of all
- governing power, while the people have the shadow. The judicial power
- of the territories is not from the people of the territories, who are
- so bathed in the sunlight of popular sovereignty by stump eloquence,
- but from the Federal government. The executive power of the
- territories derives its existence, not from the overflowing fountain
- of popular sovereignty, but from the Federal government. The
- secretaries of the territories are not appointed by the sovereign
- people of the territories, but are appointed independent of popular
- sovereignty.
-
- “But is there nothing in this bill that justifies the supposition that
- it contains the principle of popular sovereignty? No, not one word.
- Even the territorial councils, elected, not by the people of the
- territory, but only by certain descriptions of people, are subject to
- a double veto power, vested, first in the governor, whom they did not
- elect, and second in the President of the United States. The only
- shadow of popular sovereignty is the power given to the people of the
- territories by this bill to have, hold, buy, and sell human beings.
- The sovereign right to make slaves of their fellow-men, if they
- choose, is the only sovereignty that the bill secures.
-
- “But it may be said that Congress has the right to allow the people of
- the territories to hold slaves. The answer is, that Congress is made
- up of men, and possesses only the rights of men; and unless it can be
- shown that some men have a right to hold their fellow-men as property,
- Congress has no such right. There is not a man within the sound of my
- voice, who has not as good a right to enslave a brother man, as
- Congress has. This will not be denied, even by slave-holders.
-
- “Error may be new, or it may be old, since it is founded in a
- misapprehension of what truth is. It has its beginnings; and its
- endings. But not so truth. Truth is eternal. Like the great God, from
- whose throne it emanates, it is from everlasting to everlasting, and
- can never pass away. Such a truth is man’s right to freedom. He was
- born with it. It was his before he comprehended it. The title deed to
- it was written by the Almighty on His heart; and the record of it is
- in the bosom of the Eternal; and never can Stephen A. Douglas efface
- it, unless he can tear from the great heart of God this truth; and
- this mighty government of ours will never be at peace with God, unless
- it shall practically and universally embrace this great truth as the
- fountain of all its institutions, and the rule of its entire
- administration....
-
- “Now, gentlemen—I have done. I have no fear for the ultimate triumph
- of free principles in this country. The signs of the times are
- propitious. Victories have been won by slavery; but they have never
- been won against the onward march of anti-slavery principles. The
- progress of these principles has been constant, steady, strong and
- certain. Every victory won by slavery has had the effect to fling our
- principles more widely and favorably among the people. The annexation
- of Texas, the Florida war, the war with Mexico, the Compromise
- Measures, and the repeal of the Missouri Compromise, have all signally
- vindicated the wisdom of the great God, who has promised to override
- the wickedness of men for His own glory—to confound the wisdom of the
- crafty and bring to naught the counsels of the ungodly.”
-
-The nomination, in 1860, of Mr. Lincoln by the Republican party, of
-Stephen A. Douglas by the Northern Democracy, and of John C.
-Breckinridge by the Southern Democracy, brought on that memorable
-campaign which preceded the final collision between the North and the
-South.
-
-“Into the fight,” says Frederick Douglass, “I threw myself, with a firm
-faith and more ardent hope than ever before, and what I could do by pen
-and voice was done with a will. The most memorable feature of the
-canvass, was that it was prosecuted under the shadow of a threat.”
-
-The followers of Breckinridge had boldly announced that if they were
-defeated, they would not submit to the rule of Abraham Lincoln, but
-would proceed to take the slave-states out of the Union. This threat of
-secession was not a new one, but, coming, as it did, after the failure
-to make Kansas a slave-state, it created something like a panic in the
-North. It served for the moment to divert public opinion from political
-issues to the very grave possibility of national disruption.
-
-In spite of this openly declared purpose on the part of the Southern
-Democracy, the Republican party, made up in part of Whigs, the old
-“Liberty” and “Free Soil” parties, and a large number of the
-Abolitionists, elected Abraham Lincoln as President of the United
-States.
-
-It was a signal victory, but it brought with it little comfort, more
-anxiety, and many grave responsibilities. The people of the North were
-desirous of peace, and so were the people of the South; but to agree on
-terms was difficult. While the North, in the presence of a great triumph
-was worried and anxious, the South openly and resolutely began to
-prepare for secession and war. When, in the early part of the
-presidential canvass, the South notified the nation what it would do in
-case of defeat, the threat was generally accepted as mere bluster. No
-sooner was the result of the election known than there began to
-accumulate evidence which indicated that this threat was backed by a
-very positive determination to carry it out. The states south of the
-Ohio prepared to leave the Union in orderly procession, as if secession
-were a familiar and undisputed custom. The administration, under
-President Buchanan, saw the process of national dismemberment go on and
-merely declared that it could find no power in the Constitution to
-coerce a state. In the presence of this unchallenged dissolution of the
-Union, the North fairly quaked with fear. An opinion which favored
-almost any kind of compromise that would save the country from the
-horrors of civil war gained wide influence. While the South was
-confident of its strength to maintain itself in its present course, it
-did finally and with apparent reluctance, indicate a few of the
-conditions on which it would agree to remain in the Union. Among these
-were the following:
-
-Each Northern state, through its legislature or in convention assembled,
-should repeal all laws which tended to impair the constitutional rights
-of the South.
-
-It should pass laws for the easy and prompt execution of the Fugitive
-Slave Law.
-
-Laws should be passed imposing penalties on all malefactors, who should
-hereafter encourage the escape of fugitive slaves.
-
-Laws should be passed declaring and protecting the rights of
-slave-holders to travel and sojourn in Northern states, accompanied by
-their slaves.
-
-Every state should instruct its representatives and senators in Congress
-to repeal the law prohibiting the sale of slaves in the District of
-Columbia, and pass laws sufficient for the full protection of slave
-property in the territories of the Union.
-
-These conditions, offered by the South, could not be heartily approved
-by the people who had just won such a decided victory on an issue
-involving these very conditions. Yet there was a decided wave of popular
-feeling in favor of peace upon any terms. Men of positive convictions
-and eminent in all walks of life—William H. Seward, H. B. Anthony, and
-Joshua R. Giddings—were now ready to purchase it at almost any price.
-The enthusiasm for emancipation and free soil that had so stirred the
-North during the presidential campaign, began to wane, and so serious a
-reaction set in that, for a time, it seemed likely to make barren the
-Republican victory. Not only so, but the mob-spirit of the ’30’s was
-reawakened, and Wendell Phillips, William Lloyd Garrison, Frederick
-Douglass, and their supporters were assaulted on the streets of Boston.
-The people of the North refused to tolerate further agitation against
-slavery, and were desirous, in every possible way, to appease the anger
-of the other section. Committees were appointed to confer with
-representatives of the South for the purpose of obtaining a better
-understanding of their grievances.
-
-Thus, while the North seemed anxious to recede from almost every
-position it had won in the recent election, the South was too confident
-of its strength and of the justice of its cause to give much
-encouragement to the messengers of peace from the other side. The
-situation just described is an interesting illustration of the
-characteristic difference between the people of the North and the South
-on every question in which the Negro was involved. The North was very
-reluctant to make slavery an issue; the South was always willing to be
-challenged on that issue. In the North, the Negro was a problem; in the
-South, he was property. It is always easier to deal with property than
-to deal with a problem. For example: In the Kansas and Nebraska
-controversy, the South wanted territory for slave-property, and the
-North wanted it as an outlet for New England emigrants. If the only
-question involved had been to save the black man from further
-enslavement, the South would very possibly have won. In other words,
-interest in the Negro as a human being, deserving a chance to live and
-grow, was not the only and perhaps not the immediate motive behind the
-men who fought for free soil. Slavery was fundamental and therefore,
-from the point of view of party politics, a dangerous issue. There were
-men in the North and also in the South who for conscience’ sake would
-like to have seen the Negro emancipated, but the nation was not yet
-ready for it. It involved consequences so vast and so far-reaching that
-the mass of the people hesitated and were afraid. In the state of the
-country at that time, the political parties of the North were anxious to
-make it appear to the South that they had little or no concern about the
-Negro, either as a freeman or a slave. Their great anxiety was to save
-the Union. Mr. Lincoln was politically wise enough to state that his
-administration was in no way committed to emancipation or to anything
-else that looked to a change in the condition of the Negro people. He
-would save the Union with or without slavery. He would very likely have
-found himself lacking in national confidence or support, had he failed
-to make this declaration.
-
-When the South decided to go out of the Union, it furnished the
-President with the one thing needed and that was a platform on which he
-could unite the people of the North. When his policy was distinctly the
-preservation of the government, Free Soil Democrats, Abolitionists, and
-all believers in an undivided country, came at his call. All sentiment
-in favor of emancipation served only to swell the passionate appeal to
-the national feeling to save the Union. The Negro’s only hope was that,
-in this threatened conflict to preserve intact the federation of the
-states, his emancipation might become an inevitable necessity.
-
-Frederick Douglass expressed this hope in the following language: “I
-confess to a feeling allied to satisfaction at the prospect of a
-conflict between the North and South. Standing outside of the pale of
-American humanity, denied citizenship, unable to call this land of my
-birth my country, and adjudged by the Supreme Court to have no rights
-which a white man was bound to respect, and longing for the end of
-bondage for my people, I was ready for any political upheaval that would
-bring about an end to the existing condition of things.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XII
- DOUGLASS’S SERVICES IN THE CIVIL WAR
-
-
-The Civil War came on as the direct result of the irreconcilable
-sentiments of the North and the South on the question of slavery and the
-political conflicts already mentioned. On the part of the South, it was
-begun and waged with marvelous courage and intelligence to preserve
-slavery and to establish the right of secession; and on the part of the
-North, to preserve the Union, and the right of Congress to deal with
-slavery as a national issue. During the first two years of the war, the
-Federal Government did and said everything possible to convince the
-people of the South that the new Republican party had no intention, near
-or remote, of interfering with slavery. At the very beginning of
-hostilities, William H. Seward, Secretary of State, declared to the
-nations of the world that “terminate however it might, the status of no
-class of people of the United States would be changed by the Rebellion;
-that the slaves would be slaves still and that the masters would be
-masters still.” This policy was consistently followed in the field of
-military operations, as well as in the civil administration of the
-government.
-
-General McClellan, Commander-in-Chief of the Union Army, early in the
-conflict, warned the slaves that “if any attempt was made by them to
-gain their freedom, it would be suppressed by an iron hand.” In many
-places Union soldiers were detailed to guard the plantations of Southern
-slave-owners. In parts of the South in possession of the Federal army,
-black fugitives, who had found their way into the lines, were returned
-to their masters by order of the commanding officers. The following is a
-copy of the proclamation issued by General T. W. Sherman at Port Royal
-in November, 1861:
-
-“In obedience to the order of the President of these United States of
-America, I have landed on your shores with a small force of national
-troops. The dictates of duty which, under the Constitution, I owe to a
-great sovereign state, and to a proud and hospitable people, among whom
-I have passed some of the pleasantest days of my life, prompt me to
-proclaim that we have come among you with no feelings of personal
-animosity; no desire to harm your citizens, destroy your property or
-interfere with your lawful rights or your social and local institutions
-beyond what the cause herein briefly attended to, may render
-unavoidable.”
-
-This proclamation is typical of those issued by General John A. Dix,
-General Burnside, and other Union commanders in different parts of the
-South. All this was in perfect accord with President Lincoln’s
-oft-repeated declaration, that his paramount object was to save the
-Union and not to save or destroy slavery. “If I could save the Union,
-without freeing the slaves, I would do it,” said he. “If I could do it
-by freeing some and leaving others alone, I would also do that. What I
-do about slavery and the colored race, I do because I believe it helps
-to save the Union, and what I forbear, I forbear because I do not
-believe it would help to save the Union.... I have here stated my
-purpose according to my views of official duty, and I intend no
-modification of my oft-expressed wish that all men everywhere could be
-free.”
-
-This declaration of President Lincoln was reflected in every act of
-every agency of his administration. It gave the cause of the Union a
-spirit and character wholly apart from the cause of Emancipation. It is
-needless to say that this attitude of the Federal government was not
-pleasing to the Abolitionists, and the colored people in the free-states
-were much disheartened. Horace Greeley voiced the impatience of this
-element when, in a letter of complaint to the President, he said: “Every
-hour of defense of slavery is an hour of added and deepened peril to the
-Union;” and asked, “if the seeming subserviency of your policy to the
-slave-holding, slavery-upholding interests, is not the perplexity and
-the despair of statesmen of all parties?”
-
-In spite of the seeming pro-slavery policy of the national
-administration, Frederick Douglass was earnestly consecrating every
-energy of his being to the President’s support. He was wise enough to
-understand that if Lincoln in the beginning, had stated his policy to
-be, not only to save the Union, but also to free the slaves, all would
-have been lost. While other Abolitionists were impatient and doubtful of
-Mr. Lincoln’s course, Douglass declared himself convinced that the war,
-even though it be called a “white man’s war,” was nevertheless the
-beginning of the end of the nation’s great evil. He still believed, and
-so declared in his public speeches, that “the mission of the war was the
-liberation of the slaves as well as the salvation of the Union.” “I
-reproached the North,” he said, “that they fought with one hand, while
-they might strike more effectively with two; that they fought with the
-soft white hand, while they kept the black iron hand chained and
-helpless behind them; that they fought the effect, while they protected
-the cause; and said that the Union cause would never prosper until the
-war assumed an anti-slavery attitude and the Negro was enlisted on the
-side of the Union.”
-
-It required time and the cumulation of events to bring about a state of
-feeling that would tolerate the suggestion of using colored men in the
-Union army. Mr. Douglass more than any other one man, helped to bring
-about this change. It finally became evident that if the Negroes were
-good enough to be employed in the Confederate ranks, as laborers, they
-ought to be good enough for like service in the Union lines. In the
-South, thousands of Negroes were at home, protecting the families of the
-men who fought in the field, and raising crops as subsistence for the
-Confederate soldiers and their wives and children; thousands more were
-employed in building fortifications, digging trenches, and doing work
-which otherwise would have had to be done by the men who were needed at
-the front; and, anomalous as it may seem, a few colored men, it is said,
-were actually enrolled and enlisted as soldiers in the Confederate army,
-fighting for their own continued enslavement. The following account was
-published of a procession of Southern troops in New Orleans in November,
-1861: “Over 28,000 troops were reviewed by Governor Moore, Major-General
-Scoville, and Brigadier-General Ruggles. The line was over seven miles
-long. One regiment comprised 1,400 free colored men.”[4]
-
-Footnote 4:
-
- Greeley: _The American Conflict_, Vol. II, p. 522.
-
-It was expedient that the government, in enlisting Negroes, should move
-with extreme caution, not only to prevent undue irritation of Southern
-feeling, but what was more serious, to avoid offending the deep-seated
-prejudice against colored people in the North. It was rightly believed
-that thousands of white men would refuse to enlist if Negroes were to
-serve in the army on an even footing with them. Then again, the border
-states, which were more or less favorable to the Union, would be
-irrevocably lost to it. In due time, however, all objections were swept
-aside by the pressure of black men themselves and by the needs of the
-government.
-
-Correspondents from the seat of war began to tell how a Negro regiment
-at Port Royal, and certain Negro companies in Louisiana had conducted
-themselves in battles for the Union, and these accounts dispelled all
-doubts as to their fighting capacity. The early orders by the government
-to return all fugitive slaves to their masters were no longer issued.
-General Benjamin P. Butler announced that he would regard all fugitive
-slaves, finding their way into his lines, as “contraband of war.”
-Colored men were being employed extensively as laborers in building
-fortifications, roads, entrenchments, and as cooks and other necessary
-workers in support of the army. Their usefulness was so manifest that
-prejudice gradually gave way to a more kindly feeling of respect. When
-the white Union troops thus recognized the services, kindness, and
-faithfulness of these black men, they were soon willing to tolerate them
-in their ranks.
-
-Mr. Douglass eagerly assisted in the formation of the first regularly
-organized regiments of United States colored troops, the Fifty-fourth
-and Fifty-fifth Massachusetts Infantry Volunteers. Governor Andrew, an
-ardent Abolitionist, was justly proud of this important experiment, and
-said: “I stand or fall as a man and a magistrate with the rise or fall
-in the history of the Fifty-fourth Massachusetts.” Colonel Robert Gould
-Shaw, who commanded the regiment, was one of the noblest sons of this
-freedom-loving commonwealth.
-
-In order to satisfy any lingering misgivings that the people might have
-concerning this step by the government, it was stated that the regiments
-to be enlisted would not be put into active service, being held for
-garrison duty in districts where yellow fever was prevalent. It was also
-decided not to give them the same pay as that allowed to the white
-troops. Negro soldiers were to receive only seven dollars per month. At
-Fort Wagner the Fifty-fourth Massachusetts soon had an opportunity to
-show what it could do. The conduct of the men was so brave that it put
-an end to all further opposition to Negro enlistment. These colored
-soldiers refused to accept any reward for their services until the
-government was ready to pay them what it gave to other troops. They
-continued to serve and fight for the honor of the flag and the
-preservation of the Union until in the following year the country voted
-full pay to its black defenders. The Massachusetts volunteers, and all
-Negro regiments subsequently enlisted, were officered by white men.
-
-Mr. Douglass rendered valuable aid in getting together enough fit men
-for the two New England regiments. His two sons, Lewis H. and Charles R.
-Douglass, who are still living in Washington and are honored citizens,
-were among the first to enlist. Their father’s influence with the
-colored people of the country was so great that his services were almost
-indispensable. He was distressed by the restrictions placed on these
-soldiers, but said: “While I, of course, was deeply pained and saddened
-by the estimate thus put upon my race, and grieved at the slowness of
-heart which marked the conduct of the loyal government, I was not
-discouraged, and urged every man who could enlist to get an eagle on his
-button, a musket on his shoulder, and the star and spangle over his
-head.” On March 2, 1863, he issued an appeal to his people which was in
-part as follows:
-
- “Men of Color, To Arms.
-
- “When first the rebel cannon shattered the walls of Sumter and drove
- away its starving garrison, I predicted that the war then and there
- inaugurated would not be fought out entirely by white men. Every
- month’s experience during these dreary years has confirmed that
- opinion. I have implored the imperiled nation to unchain against her
- foes her powerful black hand. Slowly and reluctantly that appeal is
- beginning to be heeded. Stop not now to complain that it was not
- heeded sooner. That it should not, may or may not have been best. This
- is not the time to discuss that question. Leave it to the future. When
- the war is over, the country saved, peace established, and the black
- man’s rights are secured, as they will be, history with an impartial
- hand will dispose of that and sundry other questions. Action! action!
- not criticism, is the plain duty of this hour. Words are now useful
- only as they stimulate to blows. The office of speech now is only to
- point out when, where and how to strike to the best advantage. From
- East to West, from North to South, the sky is written all over, ‘Now
- or Never.’ Liberty won only by white men will lose half its lustre.
- ‘Who would be free, must themselves strike the blow.’ ‘Better, even to
- die free, than to live slaves.’ This is the sentiment of every brave
- colored man amongst us. There are weak and cowardly men in all races.
- We have them amongst us. They tell you this is a ‘white man’s war’;
- that you will ‘be no better off after the war, than you were before
- the war’; that the ‘getting of you into the army is to sacrifice you
- on the first opportunity.’ Believe them not. Cowards themselves, they
- do not wish to have their cowardice shamed by your example. Leave them
- to their timidity, or to whatever motive may hold them back. I have
- not thought lightly of the words I am now addressing to you. The
- counsel I give comes of close observation of the great struggle now in
- progress, and of the deep conviction that this is your hour and mine.
- In good earnest, then, and after the best deliberation, I now, for the
- first time during this war, feel at liberty to call and counsel you to
- arms. By every consideration which binds you to your enslaved fellow
- countrymen, and to the peace and welfare of your country; by every
- aspiration which you cherish for the freedom and equality of
- yourselves and your children; by all the ties of blood and identity
- which make us one with the brave black men now fighting our battles in
- Louisiana and in South Carolina, I urge you to fly to arms, and smite
- with death the power that would bury the government and your liberty
- in the same hopeless grave. I wish I could tell you that the state of
- New York calls you to this high honor. For the moment her constituted
- authorities are silent on the subject. They will speak by and by, and
- doubtless on the right side, but we are not compelled to wait for her.
- We can get at the throat of treason and slavery through the state of
- Massachusetts. She was first in the War of Independence; first to
- break the chains of her slaves; first to make the black man equal
- before the law; first to admit colored children to her common schools;
- and she was first to answer with her blood the alarm-cry of the
- nation, when its capital was menaced by rebels. You know her patriotic
- governor, and you know Charles Sumner. I need not add more.
-
- “Massachusetts now welcomes you to arms as soldiers. She has but a
- small colored population from which to recruit. She has full leave of
- the general government to send one regiment to the war, and she has
- undertaken to do it. Go quickly and help fill up the first colored
- regiment from the North. I am authorized to assure you that you will
- receive the same wages, the same rations, the same equipments, the
- same protection, the same treatment, and the same bounty, secured to
- white soldiers. You will be led by able and skilful officers, men who
- will take special pride in your efficiency and success. They will be
- quick to accord to you all the honor you shall merit by your valor,
- and to see that your rights and feelings are respected by other
- soldiers. I have assured myself on these points. More than twenty
- years of unswerving devotion to our common cause may give me some
- humble claim to be trusted at this momentous crisis. I will not argue.
- To do so implies hesitation and doubt, and you do not hesitate; you do
- not doubt. The day dawns. The morning star is bright upon the horizon.
- The iron gate of our prison stands half open. One gallant rush from
- the North will fling it wide open, while four millions of our brothers
- and sisters shall march out into liberty.
-
- “The chance is now given you to end in a day the bondage of centuries
- and to rise in one bound from social degradation to the place of
- common equality with all other varieties of men. Remember Denmark
- Vesey, of Charleston; remember Shields Green, and Copeland, who
- followed noble John Brown, and fell as glorious martyrs for the cause
- of the slave. Remember that in a contest with oppression, the Almighty
- has no attribute which can take sides with the oppressors. The case is
- before you. This is our golden opportunity. Let us accept it and
- forever wipe out the dark reproaches unsparingly hurled against us by
- our enemies. Let us win for ourselves the gratitude of our country,
- and the best blessings of our posterity through all time. The nucleus
- of this first regiment is now in camp at Readville, a short distance
- from Boston. I will undertake to forward to Boston all persons
- adjudged fit to be mustered into the regiment, who shall apply to me
- at once, or at any time within the next two weeks.”
-
-The immediate effect of the enlistment of colored troops in the Union
-army was to call forth a feeling of resentment on the part of the white
-soldiers of the South. It is asking too much of human nature to have
-expected anything else. The prejudice instantly found official
-expression in the proclamation by the Confederate government that it
-would treat white officers of colored troops and colored soldiers when
-captured, as felons; Negro Union prisoners would be shot or sent back to
-slavery. This threat was literally carried out in several instances. For
-nearly a year the Confederate armies pursued this course toward black
-men who were caught wearing the uniform of a Union soldier.
-
-During all this time the Federal government was silent: no word of
-protest and no threat of retaliation. Horace Greeley in the _Tribune_
-put the matter in strong terms when he stated that “every black soldier
-now goes to battle with a halter about his neck.... The simple question
-is, Shall we protect and insure to our Negro soldiers the ordinary
-treatment of a prisoner of war? Every Negro yet captured has suffered
-death or been sent back to the hell of slavery, from which he had
-escaped.”
-
-The colored people in the North were for a time thoroughly discouraged.
-The government, it seemed to them, put a low estimate upon them as
-soldiers. When Mr. Douglass was appealed to by Major George L. Stearns,
-an Abolitionist, and friend of John Brown, he expressed himself in part
-as follows:
-
- “I am free to say, dear sir, that the case looks as if the confiding
- colored soldiers had been betrayed into bloody hands by the government
- in whose defense they had been so heroically fighting.... If the
- President is ever to demand justice and humanity for black soldiers,
- is not this the time for him to do it? How many Fifty-fourth men must
- be cut to pieces, its mutilated prisoners killed and the living sold
- into slavery or tortured to death by inches, before Mr. Lincoln shall
- say, ‘Hold! Enough’?”
-
-Appeals of this kind finally had the effect of moving the government to
-action. In order himself to be sure as to just what it intended to do,
-and before inducing any other colored men to go to the front, Mr.
-Douglass made up his mind to see the President personally. It was, at
-this time, an unheard-of thing for a colored man to go to the White
-House with a grievance, but he had many influential friends and admirers
-in Washington, who assured him that he would be well treated. Senators
-Sumner, Wilson, and Pomeroy; Secretary of the Treasury Salmon P. Chase,
-Assistant Secretary of War Dana, all guaranteed him a safe passage into
-Mr. Lincoln’s presence. Senator Pomeroy introduced Mr. Douglass, and
-they soon found that they had much in common. The one had traveled a
-long hard journey from the slave-cabin of Maryland, and the other a
-thorny road from the scant and rugged life in Kentucky, to the high
-position of President. The one was too great to be a slave, and the
-other too noble to remain, in such a national crisis, a private citizen.
-Mr. Douglass’s account of this historic interview with the President,
-the first instance of the kind, I believe, in the history of the
-country, is worth reproducing:
-
- “I was accompanied to the Executive Mansion and introduced to
- President Lincoln by Senator Pomeroy. Long lines of care were already
- deeply written on Mr. Lincoln’s brow, and his strong face lighted up
- as soon as my name was mentioned. As I approached and was introduced
- to him, he arose and extended his hand and bade me welcome. I at once
- felt that I was in the presence of an honest man—one whom I could
- love, honor, and trust without reserve or doubt. Proceeding to tell
- him who I was and what I was doing, he promptly but kindly stopped me,
- saying, ‘I know who you are, Mr. Douglass; Mr. Seward has told me
- about you. Sit down. I am glad to see you.’ I then told him the object
- of my visit; that I was assisting to raise colored troops; that
- several months before I had been very successful in getting men to
- enlist, but that now it was not easy to induce the colored men to
- enter the service because there was a feeling among them that the
- government did not, in several respects, deal fairly with them. Mr.
- Lincoln asked me to state particulars. I replied that there were three
- particulars which I wished to bring to his attention. First, that
- colored soldiers ought to receive the same wages as those paid to
- white soldiers. Second, that colored soldiers ought to receive the
- same protection when taken prisoners, and be exchanged as readily and
- on the same terms as any other prisoners, and that, if Jefferson Davis
- should shoot or hang colored soldiers in cold blood, the United States
- government should, without delay, retaliate in kind and degree upon
- Confederate soldiers in its hands as prisoners. Third, when colored
- soldiers, seeking ‘the bubble reputation, at the cannon’s mouth’
- performed great and uncommon service on the battle-field, they should
- be rewarded by distinction and promotion precisely as white soldiers
- are rewarded for like services.
-
- “Mr. Lincoln listened with patience and silence to all I had to say.
- He was serious and even troubled by what I had said and by what he
- himself had evidently before thought upon the same points. He, by his
- silent listening, not less than by his earnest reply to my words,
- impressed me with the solid gravity of his character.
-
- “He began by saying that the employment of colored troops at all was a
- great gain to the colored people; that the measure could not have been
- successfully adopted at the beginning of the war; that the wisdom of
- making colored men soldiers was still doubted; that their enlistment
- was a serious offense to popular prejudice; that they had larger
- motives for being soldiers than white men; that they ought to be
- willing to enter the service upon condition; that the fact that they
- were not to receive the same pay as white soldiers seemed a necessary
- concession to smooth the way to their employment at all as soldiers,
- but that ultimately they would receive the same. On the second point,
- in respect to equal protection he said the case was more difficult.
- Retaliation was a terrible remedy, and one which it was very difficult
- to apply; that, if once begun, there was no telling where it would
- end; that if he could get hold of the Confederate soldiers who had
- been guilty of treating colored soldiers as felons he could easily
- retaliate, but the thought of hanging men for a crime perpetrated by
- others was revolting to his feelings. He thought that the rebels
- themselves would stop such barbarous warfare; that less evil would be
- done if retaliation were not resorted to and that he had already
- received information that colored soldiers were being treated as
- prisoners of war. In all this I saw the tender heart of the man rather
- than the stern warrior and commander-in-chief of the American army and
- navy, and while I could not agree with him, I could but respect his
- humane spirit.
-
- “On the third point he seemed to have less difficulty, though he did
- not absolutely commit himself. He simply said that he would sign any
- commission to colored soldiers whom his Secretary of War should
- commend to him. Though I was not entirely satisfied with his views, I
- was so well satisfied with the man and with the educating tendency of
- the conflict that I determined to go on with the recruiting.”
-
-From the White House, Mr. Douglass went directly to the War Department
-and had an interview with Stanton. Contrary to his expectation, he found
-the Secretary most cordial, listening to the complaints with interest
-and patience. Douglass says that Stanton made “the best defense that I
-had heard from any one of the treatment of colored soldiers by the
-government. I was not satisfied, yet I left in the full belief that the
-true course to the black man’s freedom and citizenship was over the
-battle-field and that my business was to get every black man I could
-into the Union army.
-
-“Both the President and Secretary assured me that justice would
-ultimately be done to my race and,” he adds, “I gave full credit and
-faith to these promises.” He was now better than ever prepared to say to
-his people that, if they would be free, they must not be afraid to
-suffer injustice and, if need be, cruelty.
-
-In his interview with Mr. Stanton, the question came up as to the
-advisability of commissioning colored men as officers of colored
-regiments. The Secretary expressed his willingness and readiness to
-issue a commission to Mr. Douglass, if he would accept. On being assured
-that he would, Stanton promised to make him assistant adjutant to
-General Thomas, who was recruiting and organizing troops in Mississippi.
-He returned to his home in Rochester, N. Y., confidently expecting that
-the commission would be sent him, but for some reason, not explained, it
-was never issued. Mr. Douglass’s only comment on this lapse of the
-Secretary of War was: “The government, I fear, was still clinging to the
-idea that positions of honor in the service should be occupied by white
-men and that it would not do to inaugurate the policy of perfect
-equality.”
-
-At length the outlook improved. Signs appeared of better treatment of
-the colored soldiers by the Confederate armies. On July 30, 1863,
-President Lincoln issued an order “that for every soldier of the United
-States killed in violation of the laws of war, a rebel soldier shall be
-executed; and for every one enslaved by the enemy or sold into slavery,
-a rebel soldier shall be placed at hard labor on the public works.” All
-the Union generals readily coöperated with the President’s efforts to
-have his black troops receive equal consideration. General Grant was
-especially interested in this matter and gave instructions to the white
-men in his ranks to treat the colored soldiers as comrades.
-
-The Negro troops, by their soldierly qualities, displayed at Fort
-Wagner, Vicksburg, Port Hudson, Morris Island, and other places, had
-fully earned the right to honorable treatment, and such deserving had
-its good effects. When the government finally recognized the services of
-its black defenders, there was no trouble in getting the colored men to
-enlist. From each state and territory in and out of the Union, they
-offered themselves to the Federal government with as much eagerness as
-if they were already in possession of every right they hoped to receive.
-
-The following table of figures will show how largely black men responded
-to President Lincoln’s call to the defense of the Union:
-
- Connecticut 1,764
- Maine 104
- Massachusetts 3,966
- New Hampshire 125
- Rhode Island 1,837
- Vermont 120
- New Jersey 1,185
- New York 4,125
- Pennsylvania 8,612
- Colorado 95
- Illinois 1,811
- Indiana 1,537
- Iowa 440
- Kansas 2,080
- Minnesota 104
- Michigan 1,387
- Ohio 5,092
- Wisconsin 165
- Delaware 954
- District of Columbia 3,269
- Kentucky 23,703
- Maryland 8,718
- Missouri 8,344
- West Virginia 196
- Alabama 4,969
- Arkansas 5,526
- Florida 1,044
- Louisiana 3,480
- Mississippi 17,869
- North Carolina 5,035
- South Carolina 5,462
- Tennessee 20,123
- Texas 47
- At large 733
- Not accounted for 5,083
- Officers 7,122
- ———————
- Total 186,017[5]
-
-Footnote 5:
-
- _History of the Negro Race in America_, George W. Williams, Vol. II,
- p. 299.
-
-In addition to this impressive total it is estimated that there were
-about 92,576 colored men serving with regiments in other capacities.
-That the Negroes proved to be good soldiers, whenever or wherever their
-fibre was put to trial, is the unvarying testimony of every officer and
-commander who had any opportunity to know their conduct in the field.
-The exigencies of the war were such that the troops thus furnished were
-sorely needed. The whole fighting strength of the North was none too
-great to cope with the Southern armies, and the enlistment of black men
-was effected at a critical moment in the struggle.
-
-From another point of view, this employment of colored troops with their
-good conduct on the field was an important event in the history of the
-Negro. It was the first opportunity given to him to demonstrate, on a
-large scale, that he was superior to the estimate put upon him at that
-time by the American people. The current of popular feeling against the
-race rapidly changed. The Southern soldiers also altered their attitude
-when they discovered in black skin courage and character worthy of honor
-and respect.
-
-On both sides of the firing-line the colored men proved themselves to be
-friends of the white race. They shrank from no danger, however great;
-they refused no task, however difficult; but worked, and fought, and
-died without complaint. Negro men and women, as non-combatants, secretly
-fed, hid, and protected thousands of Union soldiers who were in perilous
-positions and without a friend or hope of favor in a hostile country.
-Many a man in blue owed life and liberty to the nursing and protection
-of some tender-hearted slave. It was to the care and devotion of these
-same humble folk that the Southern masters, when summoned to war,
-entrusted the cultivation of their lands and the lives and property of
-their families. The Negro was the “good Samaritan” in those terrible
-days, when white men were savagely bent upon destroying one another.
-
-The armies on both sides of the conflict were indebted to the black man
-as friend and as fighter. In the South, he fought against himself; in
-the North, he fought for himself. In helping to save the Union by his
-service and by his death on battlefields, he put himself in a position
-to claim a share in the fruits of reëstablished peace, and in the
-good-will of a reunited country. In view of his recorded part in this
-civil contest, it can never be said that the Negro was a mere passive
-recipient of the freedom that came to all the members of his race.
-
-After the government had fully committed itself to the policy of
-enlisting colored men in the Union army, the struggle began to assume
-the character of a war for liberty. It became so as a military
-necessity. President Lincoln’s Proclamation of Emancipation, issued on
-the first day of January, 1863, sounded the death-knell of slavery, and
-was an expression of a changed attitude on the part of the government
-and of the people generally, foretelling the end of the war.
-
-The President had been criticised by the Abolitionists, because he chose
-to fight battles for the preservation of the Union, rather than for the
-extirpation of slavery. If Douglass had ever faltered in his faith in
-Mr. Lincoln’s desire for Abolition, he was reassured by an incident
-which occurred at this time. Shortly after the Proclamation was issued,
-the President summoned him to the White House. He reports that Mr.
-Lincoln was somewhat anxious because the slaves in the South were not
-coming into the Union lines as fast as he expected and wished. He said
-that he might be forced into arrangements for peace before his purposes
-could be realized, and if so, he wanted the greatest possible number of
-slaves within the territory of freedom. The President thought that
-Douglass could, in some way, bring his Proclamation to the knowledge of
-the Negroes, and organize raiding parties, which would aid them to
-escape from bondage and reach Union ground. Referring to this interview
-Mr. Douglass said:
-
- “Mr. Lincoln saw the danger of premature peace, and like a thoughtful
- and sagacious man, he wished to provide means of rendering such
- consummation as harmless as possible. I was most impressed by this
- benevolent consideration because he had before said, in answer to the
- peace clamor, that his object was to save the Union.... What he said
- on this day showed a deeper moral conviction against slavery than I
- had ever seen before in anything spoken or written by him. I listened
- with the deepest interest and profoundest satisfaction and at his
- suggestion agreed to undertake the organization of a band of
- scouts, ... and urge the slaves to come within our boundaries.”
-
-This plan, however, was soon rendered unnecessary by Union victories in
-the field and a better military outlook.
-
-Two incidents occurred at this meeting which showed the President’s
-strong and almost affectionate regard for Frederick Douglass. What these
-were are best told by Douglass himself. He says: “While in conversation
-with him, his secretary twice announced Governor Buckingham of
-Connecticut, one of the noblest and most patriotic of the loyal
-governors. Mr. Lincoln said: ‘Tell Governor Buckingham to wait, for I
-want to have a long talk with my friend, Frederick Douglass.’ I
-interposed and begged him to see the governor at once, as I could wait,
-but no, he persisted that he wanted to talk with me and that Governor
-Buckingham could wait.... In his company I was never in any way reminded
-of my humble origin, or of my unpopular color.”
-
-The other pleasing incident of this visit is likewise best told in
-Douglass’s own words: “At the door of my friend, John A. Gray, where I
-was stopping in Washington, I found one afternoon the carriage of
-Secretary Dole, and a messenger from President Lincoln with an
-invitation for me to take tea with him at the Soldiers’ Home, where he
-then passed his nights, riding out after the business of the day was
-over at the Executive Mansion. Unfortunately, I had an engagement to
-speak that evening and having made it one of the rules of my conduct in
-life never to break an engagement if possible to keep it, I felt obliged
-to decline the honor. I have often regretted that I did not make this an
-exception to my general rule. Could I have known that no such
-opportunity could come to me again, I should have justified myself in
-disappointing a large audience for the sake of a visit with Abraham
-Lincoln.”
-
-The Emancipation Proclamation, as Mr. Douglass at the time said, was
-“the turning point in the conflict between freedom and slavery.” He and
-his race lived through the first two years of the administration of the
-“party of liberty,” in a kind of agony of hope and doubt. What the
-colored race, North and South, wanted in a hurry came with slowness. As
-the time approached for the word of deliverance, the country was in a
-state of feverish excitement. For those who had been connected with the
-movement for Abolition, everything else, for the moment, seemed to lose
-its interest, its importance, and its value in the presence of this
-impending event. Indeed, the whole country vibrated with expectation.
-
-In Tremont Temple, in Boston, on the day when Mr. Lincoln’s Proclamation
-was looked for, there was gathered a memorable company. Many of the most
-notable men in New England were present to join with the colored people
-in the song of jubilee. To quote Mr. Douglass: “A line of messengers was
-established between the telegraph office and the platform, and the time
-was occupied with brief speeches from Hon. Thomas Russell, Anna
-Dickinson, J. Sella Martin, William Wells Brown, and myself.... At last
-when patience was well-nigh exhausted and suspense was becoming agony, a
-man, I think Judge Russell, with hasty step advanced through the crowd
-and with a face fairly illumined with the news he bore, exclaimed, in
-tones that thrilled all hearts: ‘It is coming, it is on the wires.’ The
-effect of this announcement was startling beyond description, and the
-scene was wild and grand.”
-
-When the message finally came and was read, there was a scene of
-indescribable rejoicing. The crowd was so crazy with excitement that
-midnight came upon them before they were aware of it and they adjourned
-to a colored Baptist church where the jubilation did not fully exhaust
-itself until morning. Mr. Douglass described it as “the most affecting
-and thrilling occasion I ever witnessed and a worthy celebration of the
-first step on the part of the nation in its departure from the thraldom
-of ages.”
-
-The Proclamation put new energy into all war measures and as the four
-years of Mr. Lincoln’s first administration approached the end, there
-was no one to oppose him for a renomination. His reëlection seemed to be
-an overwhelming vindication of his policy. Frederick Douglass was a
-prominent figure at the inauguration ceremonies and was looking
-gratefully and joyously up into the kindly face of the great President
-when he uttered these noble words: “Fondly do we hope, and fervently do
-we pray that this mighty scourge of war may speedily pass away. Yet if
-God wills that it continue until all the wealth piled by the bondsmen’s
-two hundred and fifty years of unrequited toil shall be sunk, and until
-every drop of blood drawn with the lash shall be paid for by another
-drawn with the sword, as was said three thousand years ago, so still it
-must be said, that ‘the judgments of the Lord are true and righteous
-altogether.’”
-
-Speaking of this event Mr. Douglass said:
-
- “In the evening of the day of the inauguration, another new experience
- awaited me. The usual reception was given at the Executive Mansion,
- and though no colored person had ever ventured to present himself on
- such an occasion, it seemed, now that freedom had become the law of
- the republic, and colored men were on the battle-field mingling their
- blood with that of white men in one common effort to save the country,
- that it was not too great an assumption for a colored man to offer his
- congratulations to the President with those of other citizens. It is
- never an agreeable experience to go where there can be any doubt of
- welcome, and my colored friends had too often realized discomfiture
- from this cause to be willing to subject themselves to such
- unhappiness. It was plain, then, that some one must lead the way, and
- that if the colored man would have his rights, he must take them; and
- now, though it was plainly quite the thing for me to attend President
- Lincoln’s reception, they all with one accord began to make excuses.
- It was finally agreed that Mrs. Dorsey should bear me company, so
- together we joined in the grand procession of citizens from all parts
- of the country and moved slowly toward the Executive Mansion. Upon
- reaching the door, two policemen stationed there took me rudely by the
- arm and ordered me to stand back, for their directions were to admit
- no persons of my color. I told the officers I was quite sure there was
- some mistake for no such order could have emanated from President
- Lincoln; and that if he knew I was at the door, he would desire my
- admission. They then, to put an end to the parley, as I suppose,
- assumed an air of politeness, and offered to conduct me in. We
- followed their lead, and we soon found ourselves walking some planks
- out of a window, which had been arranged as a temporary passage for
- the exit of visitors. We halted as soon as we saw the trick, and I
- said to the officers, ‘You have deceived me. I shall not go out of
- this building till I see President Lincoln.’ At this moment a
- gentleman who was passing in, recognized me, and I said to him: ‘Be so
- kind as to say to Mr. Lincoln that Frederick Douglass is detained by
- officers at the door.’ It was not long before Mrs. Dorsey and I walked
- into the spacious East Room, amid a scene of elegance such as in this
- country I had never before witnessed. Like a mountain pine, high above
- all others, Mr. Lincoln stood, in his grand simplicity and home-like
- beauty. Recognizing me, even before I reached him, he exclaimed, so
- that all around could hear him, ‘Here comes my friend Douglass.’
- Taking me by the hand, he said, ‘I am glad to see you. I saw you in
- the crowd to-day listening to my inaugural address. How did you like
- it?’ I said, ‘Mr. Lincoln, I must not detain you with my poor opinion,
- when there are thousands waiting to shake hands with you.’ ‘No, no,’
- he said, ‘you must stop a little, Douglass; there is no man in the
- country whose opinion I value more than yours. I want to know what you
- think of it.’ I replied, ‘Mr. Lincoln, that was a sacred effort.’ ‘I
- am glad you liked it,’ he said; and I passed on, feeling that any man,
- however distinguished, might well regard himself honored by such
- expressions from such a man.”
-
-The events of the war moved rapidly toward the end and to peace. Mr.
-Douglass was in Boston when Richmond was captured. New England was more
-stirred over the fall of the Confederate capital than by any other
-single event of the war, except the Emancipation Proclamation. Faneuil
-Hall was again the scene of a great gathering. The victory was to be
-celebrated in song and speech. The governor of the state, Senator
-Wilson, and Robert C. Winthrop were among the speakers, and with them
-was Frederick Douglass. A meeting of this kind anywhere in New England
-would at that time have been incomplete without him. His presence on the
-platform, sharing honors with the patrician Winthrop, served to
-illustrate the change of fortunes that are possible under a democratic
-form of government. Less than twenty-five years before, Douglass, a
-fugitive from Maryland, had stood behind Mr. Winthrop’s chair at table
-as a waiter, at a dinner in his honor in New Bedford. He had won the
-position he now occupied by his services to a people whose cause men in
-the North had come at length to recognize as their own, because it was
-the cause of humanity.
-
-Mr. Douglass at this time had reason to feel not only joy but gratitude.
-It was clear that all he had hoped and struggled for was soon to be
-realized. The close of the war and the overthrow of the institution of
-slavery was for him a sort of personal victory. But his rejoicing was
-soon turned to mourning. At the time of the assassination of President
-Lincoln he was in Rochester, and he spoke at a meeting held to give
-expression to the sorrow which that event created. The circumstances are
-thus related by a friend:
-
-“Rochester court-house never held a larger crowd than was gathered to
-mourn over the martyred President. The meeting was opened by the most
-eloquent men at the bar and in the pulpit, with carefully prepared and
-earnestly uttered addresses. All the time the people were not aroused.
-Douglass, who told me that he would not speak because he was not
-invited, sat crowded in the rear. At last the feeling could be
-restrained no more; and his name burst upon the air from every side and
-filled the house. The dignified gentlemen who directed had to surrender.
-Then came the finest appeal in behalf of the father of his people, who
-had died for them especially, and would be mourned by them as long as
-one remained in America who had been a slave. I have heard Webster and
-Clay in their best moments; Channing and Beecher in their highest
-inspirations. I never heard truer eloquence; I never saw profounder
-impression. When he finished the meeting was done.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII
- EARLY PROBLEMS OF FREEDOM
-
-
-The close of the Civil War left many of the agencies of emancipation
-without a cause. The anti-slavery publications, the state and national
-anti-slavery societies, “vigilance committees,” and the vast Underground
-Railroad system, saw their purposes accomplished in the terms of peace.
-The American Anti-Slavery Society, which had been the longest in
-existence, and which, under the leadership of William Lloyd Garrison,
-had done more for freedom than any other single agency, was now ready to
-wind up its affairs. When a proposition was made for its dissolution,
-Frederick Douglass opposed it, giving his reasons in these words: “I
-felt that the work of the society was not done, that it had not
-fulfilled its mission, which was not merely to emancipate but to elevate
-the enslaved class ... that the Negro still had a cause and that he
-needed my pen and voice to plead for it.”
-
-In taking this position, he showed that he had a clear and far-reaching
-comprehension of the many and serious problems and obligations that
-would in time result from the enforced emancipation of his people. He
-clearly foresaw that these problems were of a kind which had never
-before come within the range and scope of our national experience, and
-that if the country were to make the most of the good results of the
-war, and minimize its evils, the machinery of liberation and destruction
-must somehow be converted to the service of peace and construction. Two
-great questions had been settled, that the United States was to remain
-an indivisible nation, and that slavery was henceforth impossible in
-this nation.
-
-The problems growing out of these achievements are still difficult.
-Before the Civil War, the people of the United States might have been
-classified as non-slave-holding and slave-holding white people; enslaved
-and free Negroes. Now, two of these classes, the slave-holders and the
-enslaved Negroes, disappeared and in the latter’s stead, a new element
-was injected into the population, the freedmen, 4,000,000 souls, utterly
-destitute, without learning, without experience, and without traditions;
-dependent for their guidance, and almost for bare existence, upon the
-direction and good-will of the older elements. If, after the war, the
-South and the North could have united to repair the damages and solve
-the problems the conflict had left behind it, the history of the colored
-people in America, as well as their present condition, might have been
-different from what it is.
-
-In facing the problems of reconstruction, the people of the North had no
-precedents and little knowledge of the Negro’s character to guide them.
-The men who had the responsibility of providing for the present and
-future, of rehabilitating the South on the basis of freedom, were
-trained to treat every question, social and political, from the
-standpoint of party politics. But reconstruction needed the services of
-the sociologist more than of the party leader. There were but few in
-public life capable of treating these matters in a non-partisan, a
-non-sectional, and a scientific spirit. Men could not so quickly
-overcome the animosities engendered by the Civil War. Abraham Lincoln,
-who alone seemed to have a spirit large enough to be the President of
-all the people, even to the least of them, was gone, and there was none
-in public service to take his place. While others acted in the spirit of
-war, he acted in the spirit of peace. In managing large questions, he
-had a wonderful insight into the things that would aggravate conditions
-and a fine courage in avoiding them, until they had spent their force
-with as little harm as possible. His penetrative powers, the contagion
-of his kindly spirit, his unswerving love for what was just, were needed
-quite as much after as before and during the civil strife. Had Mr.
-Lincoln lived, his clear vision, it is safe to say, would have avoided
-many of the evils to which the country has since fallen heir. As it was,
-however much the white people in slavery’s former domain may have
-suffered, the Negro has borne the brunt of every mistake of the period
-of Reconstruction.
-
-The Southern people had lost (so it seemed at the time at least)
-everything that was worth having and fighting for,—their “cause,” their
-property in slaves, their prestige, and their political supremacy. Their
-homes were devastated and their plantations ravaged by the conquering
-Yankees. Their task was not to build up what had been destroyed, but to
-begin anew. It is asking too much to expect that they could have faced
-these conditions with a cheerful spirit. The slaves, as property, were
-now free, and this freedom was regarded as a punishment visited upon
-their former masters.
-
-Free labor was new, and apart from this there was none of it to take the
-place of that of the liberated slaves. Furthermore, the white people had
-little or no faith in their possible usefulness. They feared that the
-Negro as a free man would not work, would not honor his contracts, and
-would use his liberty to commit all sorts of crimes against society.
-They could not, at once, rid themselves of the feeling that physical
-compulsion was the only way to keep the Negro within the bounds of law
-and labor. Carl Schurz, who, under the authority of the President, made
-a very thorough and statesman-like investigation of conditions, issued
-an official report of his findings, and it is clear from this paper
-that, if the Southern people could have overcome their fears of Negro
-freedom, the work of reconstruction would have been greatly simplified.
-They, however, were in no frame of mind to accept and honor any program
-for reconstruction emanating from the North. They insisted that they
-alone knew the Negro and what was best to be done for him and with him.
-
-Between the North and the South, stood the ex-slave, free and that was
-all. His situation was anomalous. As Mr. Douglass aptly says, “He was
-free from individual masters, but the slave of society.” Yet, because of
-his long service to the country, either as a slave or a freeman, he
-deserved more than he could possibly have been paid in terms of law,
-defining and defending his rights. He was without power and, as Mr.
-Douglass in describing him, said, “a man without force, is without the
-essential dignity of human nature.”
-
-In this almost totally helpless condition, the North expected too much
-of him and the ex-masters too little. It required more than the shock of
-four years of internecine war to change the solidarity of slavery into a
-society of organized self-helpfulness. A people who had been so long
-enslaved could not help being slavish in habits and instincts. They had
-little family life, no society, no institution except the church, a
-rudimentary conception of common interests, and very few traditions and
-ideals. No race ever came into the domain of freedom, independence, and
-democracy so little furnished with the elements of self-protection and
-self-determining purpose, as did the emancipated slaves forty years ago.
-Yet there were everywhere in the South important exceptions to this
-condition of race helplessness. Many free colored people, especially in
-the cities, were not hopelessly behind in the procession of progress.
-They fully understood the meaning of the war and its results. When the
-last gun was fired and they saw emancipation as a reality, their joy was
-unbounded. In many of the Southern cities, thousands of them gathered in
-the open streets and commons, where they shouted and prayed with full
-hearts, voicing in songs of jubilee and thanksgiving their gratitude for
-their great deliverance. There has been nothing like these
-demonstrations in the history of American liberty. No one who saw them
-could have any doubt whatever as to the Negro’s appreciation of his
-freedom. It is a notable fact that in none of them was ever heard a word
-of hatred or revenge toward those who had been responsible for their
-long enslavement. Their gratitude was too great to leave room for
-resentment. God, Lincoln, and Freedom formed a mysterious trinity in the
-new awakening of these emancipated people.
-
-All this was perfectly natural and hopeful, so far as it went, but it
-was not long before exultation gave way to the consciousness that this
-dearly bought liberty was a serious thing. The Negro capacity for
-happiness was large, but he could not live and sustain himself by this
-alone. Owning nothing, he had no place to live. Having nothing, he could
-get nothing. In addition to the ex-slaves, who were still fastened to
-the places where slavery left them and freedom found them, a great
-multitude, known as refugees, after emancipation made their way into the
-Union lines. When the war closed these were still with the Union army
-and dependent upon it for rations. It soon became apparent to those in
-authority, that something must be done in a large way by the Federal
-government itself to provide for this unorganized horde. To meet this
-serious condition, Congress, in the spring of 1865, passed an act
-establishing the “Freedmen’s Bureau for the Relief of Freedmen and
-Refugees.” Its main provisions were as follows:
-
- The Bureau was to have supervision and management of abandoned lands.
-
- It was to look after all subjects relating to refugees and freedmen.
-
- It was to be under the control of a commission appointed by the
- President and to continue its labors for one year after the close of
- the war.
-
- The Secretary of War was given authority to issue provisions,
- clothing, and fuel for the immediate and temporary needs of freedmen
- and their wives and children.
-
- The War Department was to set apart for the use of loyal refugees and
- freedmen abandoned lands under the control of the United States Army
- and assign to such freedmen, not more than forty acres of land, and to
- protect such persons in the possession of such land for at least three
- years at an annual rent, not to exceed six per cent. upon the
- appraised value of the land. At the end of that time, the tenant was
- allowed to purchase it and receive therefor from the government a
- certificate of purchase.
-
-In addition to these provisions, the Freedmen’s Bureau was intended to
-be a “friendly intermediary” between the ex-masters and ex-slaves.
-Nothing could have been done more surely to smooth the way for a kindly
-relationship between the two parties in question, if such a relationship
-had been possible. General O. O. Howard was the first commissioner of
-that Bureau. He had made a record as a soldier in the Union Army, but,
-better still, he was a man of humane impulses, without sectional bias,
-and of exalted Christian character. The value of his services in the
-work of Reconstruction can be easily seen by a glance at some of his
-reports made to Congress in 1865–1870.
-
-In these five years of work on the part of the Bureau to bring order out
-of chaos, there had been established over 4,000 schools, employing 9,000
-teachers and giving instruction to about a quarter of a million pupils
-of all ages. In 1870 the school attendance in the old slave-states
-amounted to nearly eighty per cent. of the enrollment. The demand for
-learning on the part of the colored people, as shown by the Bureau’s
-work, was amazing, and afforded a gratifying evidence of their sense of
-responsibility as freedmen. The Negroes themselves made a good showing
-of what they were able to do by their own efforts in creating the means
-for their instruction. They sustained over 1,300 schools and built over
-500 school buildings, contributing more than $200,000 out of their
-earnings to further the cause of education.
-
-The value of the Freedmen’s Bureau in thus stimulating an interest in
-this important subject and in developing a serious sense of
-responsibility on the part of the freedmen cannot well be overestimated.
-Carl Schurz in his report says:
-
-“The Freedmen’s Bureau would have been an institution of the greatest
-value, under competent leadership, had not its organization, to some
-extent, been invaded by mentally and morally unfit persons.... Nothing
-was needed at this time so much as an acknowledged authority, standing
-guard between the master and the ex-slave, commanding and possessing the
-confidence and respect of both, to aid the emancipated black man to make
-the best possible use of his unaccustomed freedom, and to aid the white
-man to whom free Negro labor was a well-nigh incurable idea, in meeting
-the difficulties, partly real and partly conjured up by the white man’s
-prejudiced imagination.”
-
-The lack of fit men, in sufficient numbers, to continue the good work
-inaugurated by the Freedmen’s Bureau was the cause, in great part, of
-the failure of Reconstruction methods of helpfulness. There were
-employed men of partisan spirit whose vision was clouded by political
-aspirations, and thus the future well-being of both races in the South
-was not kept paramount. The cause of most of the evils that in a few
-years followed and overwhelmed the colored people in the South, was lack
-of men strong in character, patriotism, justice, and understanding for
-the work in hand. This is true, in spite of the fact that there were
-those who were equal to the occasion, but who alone had not the power to
-perform the tasks set for them. No greater injury has been done the
-colored people of this country than that which resulted from putting
-them in a position of political antagonism to their former masters.
-
-But the purposes of this biography do not require a full statement of
-the causes that led to the overthrow of the temporary supremacy held by
-the freedmen and their Northern allies. A careful reading of the history
-of the Southern states since the adoption of the Thirteenth Amendment to
-the Constitution of the United States in 1865, must convince the
-impartial reader that the Negroes were less the instigators than the
-victims of the mistakes of Reconstruction. Many of those who played the
-false rôle of friends and leaders left the freedmen to bear the brunt of
-the punishment which they have since suffered patiently, heroically, and
-alone. The Negroes of the South during the Reconstruction period were
-always amenable to wise direction. Those who were on hand to guide them,
-easily won their favor. There seems to be no reason to doubt that, had
-it been offered, the freedmen would have followed the leadership of the
-best elements in the South as willingly, if not more willingly, than
-that which they did accept.
-
-The difficulty was that the Southern people could not in a day, or in a
-decade, change their inborn conviction that emancipation was forced upon
-them as a punishment. They accepted this punishment in a spirit in which
-injured pride, the sense of loss of property, loss of “cause,” and
-revenge were elements. But with all these losses and defeats, the
-imperious temper of the Southern people suffered no impairment, and they
-were in no mood to take hold of the work of Reconstruction in the spirit
-of the victorious North.
-
-The South hesitated to act, and the ex-slave had no power to do so. As a
-result, the responsibility for movements for the protection of the
-Negroes fell to the North. It sought to accomplish this object by giving
-freedmen all the rights of citizenship. Under the presuppositions upon
-which our government was founded, this step was logical, even though it
-may have been, and indeed seems to have been, at that time unwise.
-
-What has been said in the foregoing pages indicates what may be called
-the new field of labor for Frederick Douglass after emancipation. When
-the great war came to an end and the object for which he had so long
-labored was indeed an accomplished fact, he confessed that his great joy
-was somewhat tinged with a feeling of sadness. He said, “I felt that I
-had reached the end of the noblest part of my life.” He was still in his
-prime, and all his faculties were clear and ready for action. He had no
-occupation, no business, no profession. His training and associations,
-during the previous thirty years, had unfitted him for manual labor, and
-he had no fortune that would enable him to live without exertion of some
-kind. But thoughts and feelings of this sort were soon swept aside by
-new interests and anxieties of the most absorbing character.
-
-In the first place, fresh evidences of his popularity began to manifest
-themselves. His struggle for emancipation had been so conspicuous, his
-eloquence so stirring, and his participation in all the great questions
-of the day so earnest and compelling, that his vogue continued as
-before.
-
-In the great diversity of distinguished men and women who figured in the
-history of the quarter of a century immediately preceding the Civil War,
-Frederick Douglass was in the fullest sense of the word, a “self-made
-man.” All kinds of persons were interested in him. His authority on
-every matter that concerned the Negro, North or South, was seldom
-questioned. His leadership, up to this time, was not often disputed. The
-American people manifested greater desire to hear him than ever before
-and invitations to lecture began to pour in upon him from colleges,
-lyceums, literary societies, and churches. It is scarcely too much to
-say that he was one of the most popular men on the lecture platform, and
-at a time when such illustrious personages as Henry Ward Beecher,
-Wendell Phillips, Theodore Tilton, Anna Dickinson, and Mary A. Livermore
-gave to the American lyceum its highest distinction. His themes were no
-longer anti-slavery in character. His new lectures bore such titles as,
-“Self-made Men,” “The Races of Men,” “William, the Silent,” “John
-Brown,” etc., all of which showed a wide reading, and a mastery of the
-art of eloquence. In addition to these lectures, he was called upon from
-every direction for informal talks on an almost endless variety of
-subjects.
-
-But whatever might be the theme or the occasion, he could not get away
-from the Negro problem. As he said, “I never rise to speak before any
-American audience, without a feeling that my failure or success will
-bring harm or benefit to my whole race.” When the all-important question
-of reconstruction came to be considered, Mr. Douglass was found to be
-fully conversant with the progress of events, prepared to say his word,
-and play his part. While other men were uncertain, confused, and timid,
-Douglass’s stand was bold, direct, and fearless. When it was time for
-him to speak and act, his words attracted wide attention and many
-persons in and out of Congress were willing to follow his leading. He
-had always been frank, honorable, and resourceful on the question of
-just treatment for his race and he was so far in advance of most of the
-men who had it in their power to make and unmake the laws, that it would
-have been a decided misfortune for the colored people to have been
-without his guidance. He had a wide acquaintance among men in public
-life. No other Negro in this country, at the time, knew political
-leaders in and out of Congress so intimately. His qualities of prudence
-and sagacity, as well as his great personal charm, made him welcome in
-the councils of his party. He was the soul of honor. Being thus gifted,
-Douglass was able to be as much for his people in a personal as in a
-public capacity. He had a way of getting close to the men in power and
-of reaching their hearts and enlisting their sympathies for the objects
-in whose service he was engaged. This was most fortunate. His race was
-without official connection with the government, without experience, and
-with no clearly defined status as citizens. If ever the colored people
-needed a strong man capable in every way to represent them, it was now,
-when the war was over and the question, what to do with the free Negro,
-must be answered in definite terms of law and governmental policy. Aside
-from his commanding abilities, and his personal attractiveness to men,
-Mr. Douglass had lived through the very experiences that fitted him to
-know and feel what the Negro needed and ought to have. He had been a
-slave, a fugitive slave, and a freedman, at a time, too, when Negro
-freedom was most despaired of. No white man could appreciate, as he
-could and did, the sweetness of the terms, Freedom and Liberty. One of
-his earliest utterances on this subject indicates his feeling at this
-period. “I saw no chance,” he said, “of bettering the condition of the
-freedman, until he should cease to be merely a freedman and should
-become a citizen, and that there was no safety for him or for anybody
-else in America, outside of the American government.”
-
-At the time when Mr. Douglass publicly took this position, he was far
-more radical than some of the most ardent of his anti-slavery
-associates. This declaration was then regarded as a challenge to the
-sense of justice of the American people. Many earnest friends of the
-Negro thought it was asking too much, even though the race deserved the
-franchise. Others argued that the Negro was unfit for the suffrage and
-that it would aggravate the already strained relations between the two
-races in the South. Opposition was expected by Mr. Douglass and he was
-ready to meet it. No one understood better than he that his people had
-had no training for citizenship, but he was accustomed to say, that “if
-the Negro knows enough to fight for his country, he knows enough to
-vote; if he knows enough to pay taxes to support the government, he
-knows enough to vote; if he knows as much when sober as an Irishman
-knows when he is drunk, he knows enough to vote.” He anticipated the
-evils that would follow the enfranchisement of the ex-slaves, but
-insisted that such evils would be temporary and that the good would be
-permanent. He further insisted that it was worth all the suffering
-endured by his race to have that principle established; that the right
-of suffrage would be an incentive to arouse the latent energies of the
-Negro to become worthy of full citizenship, and that such impulse was
-imperatively needed. He always declared that political equality was a
-widely different thing from social equality. He vigorously protested
-that the right of suffrage did not mean Negro domination in the
-slave-states, if the best white people would wisely assume the
-leadership of the blacks. He believed in the domination of the fittest,
-and insisted that the white people of the South, because of their
-superiority in intelligence and in all the forces that make for
-supremacy, were in no danger of being overwhelmed by the new voters. He
-believed in the rule of the competent and that in the long run
-intelligent supremacy would be tempered with justice and the true spirit
-of democracy. He believed that those who were strong enough, either to
-help the ex-slave to get upon his feet or to crush him in his efforts to
-rise, would choose the more generous course.
-
-At any rate, he deemed the time ripe to claim for the freedmen full
-citizenship and equality before the law. When the question came forward
-for discussion, the people of the North were filled with enthusiasm over
-the results of the war and for the great objects they believed to have
-been achieved by it. It was the occasion to make a hero of every one who
-had taken part in the civil contest on the side of the Union. Even the
-Negro, for the first time, became the recipient of more than respectful
-consideration. The people of the North were as proud of his freedom as
-he was himself. If to give the Negro the franchise, and laws to protect
-him in the exercise of it as a citizen, would make more lasting the
-results of the war, the North was now in a mood to grant it to him,
-since it seemed to add to the significance of the great struggle which
-had just been so victoriously concluded. Douglass took advantage of this
-condition of things to advocate suffrage for his people. By speech and
-print and personal appeals to the leaders of public opinion, he urged
-this cause upon them in and out of season. There was no lack of evidence
-that it was gaining in every direction. The number of those who thought
-the suffrage ought to be granted, because it was right; those who
-thought it a good thing from a partisan standpoint, and those who
-thought the results of the war would be lost unless the Negro were given
-the privilege, increased rapidly.
-
-What Douglass calls one of the first steps in the direction of popular
-favor for universal suffrage, was an interview that he had with
-President Johnson on the 7th of March, 1866. He headed a delegation of
-prominent colored men, including George T. Downing, Lewis H. Douglass,
-William E. Matthews, John Jones, John F. Cook, Joseph E. Otis, A. W.
-Ross, William Whipper, John M. Brown, and Alexander Dunlop. The visit of
-these black men to the President for the purpose of urging upon the
-government the policy of the franchise for the freedmen, attracted the
-attention of the entire nation. Nothing better could have been devised
-to bring the whole question before the people and obtain a hearing for
-it.
-
-The delegation soon found that Mr. Johnson was not in sympathy with
-their plans for Negro enfranchisement. The President had evidently
-anticipated their purpose in calling upon him and he was fully prepared
-to answer their arguments. He spoke to them at great length and left no
-ground for them to doubt his position in the matter. He also gave them
-no opportunity to reply. On returning from the White House, his
-colleagues empowered Mr. Douglass to prepare an address to the public,
-to be printed simultaneously with Mr. Johnson’s address to them. Mr.
-Douglass’s paper was in the form of a reply to the President’s arguments
-against the suffrage proposition, and was as follows:
-
- “Mr. President:—In consideration of a delicate sense of propriety as
- well as of your own repeated intimations of indisposition to discuss
- or listen to a reply to the views and opinions you were pleased to
- express to us in your elaborate speech to-day, the undersigned would
- respectfully take this method of replying thereto.
-
- “Believing as we do that the views and opinions you expressed in that
- address are entirely unsound and prejudicial to the highest interest
- of our race, as well as to our country at large, we cannot do other
- than expose the same and, as far as may be in our power, arrest their
- dangerous influence. It is not necessary at this time to call
- attention to more than two or three features of your remarkable
- address. The first point to which we feel especially bound to take
- exception, is your attempt to found a policy opposed to our
- enfranchisement, upon the alleged ground of an existing hostility on
- the part of the former slaves to the poor white people of the South.
- We admit the existence of this hostility, and hold that it is entirely
- reciprocal. But you obviously commit an error by drawing an argument
- from an incident of slavery, and making it a basis for a policy
- adapted to a state of freedom. The hostility between the whites and
- blacks of the South is easily explained. It has its root and sap in
- the relation of slavery, and was incited on both sides by the cunning
- of the slave-masters. These masters secured their ascendency over both
- the poor whites and blacks by putting enmity between them.
-
- “They divided both to conquer each. There was no earthly reason why
- the blacks should not hate and dread the poor whites when in a state
- of slavery, for it was from this class that their masters received
- their slave-catchers and slave-drivers and overseers. They were the
- men called in upon all occasions by the masters whenever any fiendish
- outrage was to be committed upon the slaves. Now, sir, you cannot but
- perceive that, the cause of this hatred removed, the effect must be
- removed also. Slavery is abolished. The cause of this antagonism is
- removed, and you must see that it is altogether illogical to legislate
- from slave-holding and slave-driving premises for a people, whom you
- have repeatedly declared it your purpose to maintain in freedom.
-
- “Besides, if it were true, as you allege, that the hostility of the
- blacks toward the whites must necessarily project itself into a state
- of freedom, and that this enmity between the two races is even more
- intense in a state of freedom than in a state of slavery, in the name
- of Heaven, we reverently ask, how can you, in view of your proffered
- desire to promote the welfare of the black man, deprive him of all
- means of defense, and clothe him, whom you regard as his enemy, in the
- panoply of political power? Can it be that you recommend a policy
- which would arm the strong and cast down the defenseless? Can you, by
- any possibility of reasoning, regard this as just, fair, or wise?
- Experience proves that those are most abused who can be abused with
- the greatest impunity. Men are whipped oftenest who are whipped
- easiest. Peace between races is not to be secured by degrading one
- race and exalting another, by giving power to one and withholding from
- another, but by maintaining a state of equal justice between all
- classes. First pure, then peaceable.
-
- “On the colonization theory you were pleased to broach, very much
- could be said. It is impossible to suppose, in view of the usefulness
- of the black man in time of peace as a laborer in the South and in
- time of war as a soldier in the North, and a growing respect for his
- rights among the people and his increasing adaptation to a high state
- of civilization in his native land, that there can ever come a time
- when he can be removed from this country without a terrible shock to
- its prosperity and peace. Besides, the worst enemy of the nation could
- not cast upon its fair name a greater infamy than to admit that
- Negroes could be tolerated among them in a state of the most degrading
- slavery and oppression, and must be cast away, driven to exile, for no
- other cause than having been freed from their chains.”
-
-When the question reached Congress, the Negro was not lacking in friends
-who were willing to go the full length of the Frederick Douglass program
-of Reconstruction. The first step taken was a report made to the Senate
-by a committee having the subject in charge. This report in effect
-provided that the whole matter of franchise be left to the option of the
-several states concerned. Mr. Douglass believed he saw in this
-proposition the continued political enslavement of his people, and he
-was on his guard. The following communication written and sent to the
-Senate by the delegation which had visited President Johnson speaks for
-itself:
-
- “To the Honorable, the Senate of the United States:—The undersigned,
- being a delegation representing the colored people of the several
- states, and now sojourning in Washington, charged with the duty to
- look after the best interests of the recently emancipated, would most
- respectfully, but earnestly, pray your honorable body to favor no
- amendment of the Constitution of the United States which will grant
- any one or all of the states of this Union to disfranchise any class
- of citizens on the ground of race or color, for any consideration
- whatever. They would further respectfully represent that the
- Constitution as adopted by the Fathers of this Republic in 1789
- evidently contemplated the result which has now happened, to wit, the
- abolition of slavery. The men who framed it, and those who adopted it,
- framed and adopted it for the people, and the whole people, colored
- men being at the time legal voters in most of the states. In that
- instrument as it now stands, there is not a sentence or a syllable
- conveying any shadow of right or authority by which any State may make
- color or race a disqualification for the exercise of the right of
- suffrage, and the undersigned will regard as a real calamity the
- introduction of any words expressly or by implication, giving any
- state or states such power; and we respectfully submit that if the
- amendment now pending before your honorable body shall be adopted, it
- will enable any state to deprive any class of citizens of the elective
- franchise, notwithstanding it was obviously framed with a view to
- affect the question of Negro suffrage only.
-
- “For these and other reasons the undersigned respectfully pray that
- the amendment to the Constitution recently passed by the House and now
- before your body, be not adopted. And as in duty bound,” etc.
-
-In addition to this letter addressed to the United States Senate, Mr.
-Douglass and his associates saw and argued the matter with every member
-of that body who would grant them an audience. The “Option Measure” was
-defeated and to a considerable extent through Mr. Douglass’s influence.
-By this time the question of Negro suffrage had become a leading issue.
-For the purpose of obtaining the sense of the country on this subject,
-there was arranged what was known at the time as the “National
-Loyalists’ Convention,” to be held at Philadelphia in September, 1866.
-It was made up of delegates from all parts of the Union, including many
-influential men in and out of public life. Rochester elected Mr.
-Douglass as its sole representative, which was a great tribute to him,
-giving new recognition to the Negro race. The entire country was quick
-to take notice of the city’s action, in so important a gathering, and
-there was not only objection but open opposition to Mr. Douglass’s
-taking a seat in the convention. Some of the leading delegates united in
-an effort to persuade him not to go.
-
-Speaking of the situation, Mr. Douglass says that at Harrisburg, there
-was attached to his train cars loaded with representatives from some of
-the western states.
-
- “When my presence became known to these gentlemen,” he continues, “a
- consultation was immediately held among them upon the question of what
- was best to be done with me. It seems strange, in view of all the
- progress which had been made, that such a question should arise. But
- the circumstances of the times made me the Jonah of the Republican
- ship, and responsible for the contrary winds and misbehaving weather.
- I was duly waited upon by a committee of my brother delegates to
- represent to me the undesirableness of my attendance upon the National
- Loyalists’ Convention. The spokesman of these sub-delegates was a
- gentleman from New Orleans.... He began by telling me that he knew my
- history and my works and that he entertained no very slight degree of
- respect for me; that both himself and the gentlemen who sent him, as
- well as those who accompanied him, regarded me with admiration; that
- there was not among them the remotest objection to sitting in the
- convention with me, but their personal wishes in the matter they felt
- should be set aside for the sake of our common cause; that whether I
- should or should not go in the convention was purely a matter of
- expediency; that I must know that there was a very strong and bitter
- prejudice against my race in the North as well as in the South and
- that the cry of social and political equality would not fail to be
- raised against the Republican party if I should attend this loyal
- National convention.... I listened very attentively to the address,
- uttering no word during its delivery; but when it was finished, I said
- to the speaker and the committee, with all the emphasis I could throw
- into my voice and manner, ‘Gentlemen, with all respect, you might as
- well ask me to put a loaded pistol to my head and blow my brains out,
- as to ask me to keep out of this convention to which I have been duly
- elected. Then, gentlemen, what would you gain by the exclusion? Would
- not the charge of cowardice, certain to be brought against you, prove
- more damaging than that of amalgamation; would you not be branded all
- over the land as dastardly hypocrites, professing principles which you
- have no wish or intention of carrying out? As a matter of policy or
- expediency, you will be wise to let me in. Everybody knows that I have
- been duly elected as a delegate by the city of Rochester. This fact
- has been broadly announced and commented upon all over the country. If
- I am not admitted, the public will ask, “Where is Douglass? Why is he
- not seen in the convention?” and you would find that inquiry more
- difficult to answer than any charge brought against you for favoring
- political or social equality; but ignoring the question of policy
- altogether and looking at it as one of right and wrong, I am bound to
- go into that convention; not to do so would be to contradict the
- principles and practice of my life.’”
-
-The delegates withdrew from the car in which Mr. Douglass was riding
-without accomplishing their purpose. It was soon made evident to him
-that his argument had not changed the prejudices of his visitors. When
-he reached Philadelphia and learned of the plans of the convention, he
-easily detected a concerted scheme to ignore him altogether. “I was,” he
-says, “the ugly and deformed child of the family and to be kept out of
-sight as much as possible, while there was company in the house.”
-
-It had been arranged that the delegates should assemble at Independence
-Hall and from there march in a body through the streets to the building
-where the convention was to be held. Mr. Douglass was present at
-Independence Hall at the appointed time, but he at once realized the
-situation. Only a few of the delegates, like General B. F. Butler, had
-the courage even to greet him. He was not only snubbed generally, but it
-was hinted to him that if he attempted to walk in the procession through
-the streets of a city where but a few years ago Negroes had been
-assaulted and their houses and schools burned down, he would be jeered
-at, insulted, and perhaps mobbed. It required no little courage to act
-in the face of these conditions, but Douglass never wavered. He was
-strong enough not to falter even at the desertion of men whom he had a
-right to regard as his friends.
-
-When the procession was formed, the delegates were to march two abreast.
-By this arrangement, the man who would have the hardihood to walk beside
-the only Negro in line would be an easy mark for scorn and contempt if
-not bodily attack. It was believed that no white man, under these
-conditions, would dare to march with Douglass. One delegate after
-another, those who had formerly taken counsel with him, passed him by.
-But to use his own words: “There was one man present who was broad
-enough to take in the whole situation and brave enough to meet the duty
-of the hour; one who was neither afraid nor ashamed to own me as a man
-and a brother. One man of the purest Caucasian type, a poet, a scholar,
-brilliant as a writer, eloquent as a speaker, and holding a high
-influential position, the editor of a weekly journal having the largest
-circulation of any weekly paper in the state of New York, and that man
-was Theodore Tilton. He came to me in my isolation, seized me by the
-hand in a most brotherly way, and proposed to walk with me in the
-procession.”
-
-The delegates marching through the streets of Philadelphia met with a
-great ovation, and Mr. Douglass was singled out for special marks of
-favor. Along the entire way he was loudly cheered, applauded, and
-congratulated by the multitude. Those who had misjudged the sentiments
-of the Philadelphians were ashamed of themselves when they saw that he
-was apparently the most popular man in the procession.
-
-A very pleasing incident occurred on the line of march that day which
-served to call special attention to him. As his eyes caught a glimpse of
-a beautiful young woman among the spectators, he was seen suddenly to
-leave his place and fervently greet her. She was a member of the Auld
-family, and Mr. Douglass, recognizing her at once, paid her homage
-publicly. It appears that she had come to Philadelphia from her home in
-Baltimore when she heard that the ex-slave was to be there and walk in
-the procession as one of the great men of the occasion, and had been
-following the line for over an hour with the hope of catching a view of
-the man who, but for his desire for freedom, might still have been a
-servant in her family. The newspapers made much of the incident, and
-described it as one of the most dramatic features of the day.
-
-By the time the marchers had reached the hall, the fear of Mr.
-Douglass’s presence, as a delegate, had given way to a feeling of
-respect, pride, and comradeship. He threw off all restraint, and went in
-to win from this body a resolution in favor of the franchise for his
-people. He delivered one of those powerful and convincing addresses that
-he was well able to make when aroused. As a result, he quite captured
-and controlled the sentiment of the convention in favor of his
-resolution, and when it adjourned Mr. Douglass was congratulated for
-having achieved a personal triumph that was remarkable for its
-completeness.
-
-After the adoption of the Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth
-Amendments, there was some curious speculation as to what place
-Frederick Douglass would take in this larger world of citizenship that
-he had helped to create. A number of his friends and admirers thought
-that he had led his people so successfully out of the wilderness of
-slavery that he should now put himself into a position where he could
-guide them further in the proper use of their rights and privileges as
-citizens of the republic. Many urged that the South was the right place
-for one of his power and standing. No colored man in this country had
-such training for large responsibilities as Mr. Douglass had had, during
-the previous thirty years of service. It was also feared that, without
-such leadership as he could bring to the South, small men, of mere
-political training and of partisan methods and ambitions, would assume
-the direction of the newly-made citizens, and, by their selfishness and
-greed, bring down upon these poor people more miseries than could be
-cured in many generations. Everything seemed to invite Frederick
-Douglass to these new duties and new responsibilities. It was pointed
-out to him how easily he could become a pioneer by being elected to the
-House of Representatives, or even to the Senate, from some of the
-reconstructed states of the South.
-
-He thought long and seriously over the project, but finally concluded
-not to change his habitation for the sake of gaining political power. He
-expressed his conclusions on the matter as follows:
-
- “That I did not yield to this temptation was not entirely due to my
- age, but the idea did not entirely square well with my better judgment
- and sense of propriety. The thought of going to live among a people in
- order to gain their votes and acquire official honors was repugnant to
- my sense of self-respect, and I had not lived long enough in the
- political atmosphere of Washington to have this feeling blunted so as
- to make me indifferent to its suggestions.... I had small faith in my
- aptitude as a politician, and could not hope to cope with rival
- aspirants. My life and labors in the North had in a measure unfitted
- me for such work, and I could not have readily adapted myself to that
- peculiar oratory found to be most effective with the newly
- enfranchised class. Upon the whole, I have never regretted that I did
- not enter the arena of Congressional honors to which I was invited.
- Outside of mere personal considerations, I saw, or thought I saw,
- that, in the nature of the case, the sceptre of power had passed from
- the old slave-states to the free and loyal states, and that hereafter,
- at least for some time to come, the loyal North, with its advanced
- civilization, must dictate the policy and control the destiny of the
- republic. I had an audience ready made in the free-states, one which
- the labors of thirty years had prepared for me, and before this
- audience the freedmen needed an advocate as much as they needed a
- member in Congress. I think that in this I was right, for thus far our
- colored members in Congress have not largely made themselves felt in
- the legislation of this country, and I have little reason to think
- that I could have done better than they.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV
- SHARING THE RESPONSIBILITIES AND HONORS OF FREEDOM
-
-
-The course of events in the succeeding thirty years proved that
-Frederick Douglass was wholly right in his determination not to take up
-his residence in one of the Southern states for political purposes. Had
-he followed the advice of some of his friends, his career would have
-been considerably marred by the exigencies of party and sectional
-politics, and his character as a natural leader of his people would, in
-all probability, have shrunken to that of a state politician. He did the
-wise thing, however, in changing his residence from Rochester to
-Washington. This brought him in closer touch with his people, as well as
-near to the law-making forces of the nation.
-
-After he became settled in his new home, he soon found his heart and
-hands full of occupations that tried his soul. He was fairly overwhelmed
-with all kinds of schemes and propositions that were carried to him,
-urging him to do this or that for the protection and elevation of the
-race. It required a mind of more than ordinary shrewdness to
-discriminate between the practical and impractical. Many of the Negroes
-seemed to think him capable of performing miracles in the way of undoing
-the effects of slavery. It required a stout spirit to listen unmoved to
-the wail that came from the hearts of his sadly distracted people. Those
-of us who are living forty years after the close of the war, can little
-appreciate to what an extent the glory of emancipation was shadowed by
-the miseries of a whole race suddenly set free with no preparation for
-freedom. When one studies the history of the years that followed
-emancipation, and learns of the many sins and errors of the time, and
-the retribution that they brought upon the bewildered people in whose
-name they were committed, it must seem strange that the Negro race could
-survive and make the progress it has made. Through all the confusion and
-clamor of wants, sorrows, sufferings and disappointments, Mr. Douglass
-kept his head, and was at all times philosophical, certain that the good
-accomplished was more important than the seeming failures; that the
-hindrances to progress were transitory, the forces of progress
-permanent. After he had settled in Washington, two things at once
-engaged his attention: the publication of another paper, _The New
-National Era_, and the Freedmen’s Bank.
-
-There was apparently a pressing need for a national organ to advance the
-cause of the Negro, and it was believed that the name of Frederick
-Douglass at its head would surely bring it a wide circulation, as well
-as a commanding influence. He took hold of the project with
-characteristic vigor and invested a large amount of his savings in the
-venture. With the assistance of his two sons, both practical printers,
-the paper proved to be one of the greatest helps of the hour. Some of
-Mr. Douglass’s best utterances are to be found in the _New Era_. Its
-columns were open to the leading colored men and women of that time and
-it exerted a wide and salutary influence. However, it failed of support.
-The enterprise cost Mr. Douglass between nine and ten thousand dollars.
-He seems to have anticipated its financial misfortunes, but said of it
-afterward: “The journal was valuable, while it lasted, and the
-experiment was to me full of instruction which has to some extent been
-heeded, for I have kept well out of newspaper undertakings since, so I
-have no tears to shed.”
-
-When Mr. Douglass went to Washington, he found established there the
-Freedmen’s Bank. It was chartered by Congress and was run and managed in
-connection with the Freedmen’s Bureau. “It was,” as Mr. Douglass says,
-“more than a bank. There was something missionary in its composition.”
-Its managers were men of character and religion, and were interested in
-everything that could point the way of true living to the ex-slave. To
-teach the important lesson of thrift was its main object.
-
-For a time this bank flourished very well. Branches were established in
-various parts of the South. The poor freedmen in the bottom lands of
-Mississippi and other isolated places quickly learned the use and
-meaning of the institution; and eagerly and gratefully committed to its
-keeping their small earnings. Thousands of these depositors first came
-to know and realize their relationship to the government at Washington
-through it. The owners of United States bonds did not feel more secure
-than did these trusting new citizens of the republic.
-
-The bank and its purposes appealed to Mr. Douglass. He felt it his duty
-to do anything in his power to help the benevolent enterprise. It was
-not long before he was elected one of its trustees. He accepted the post
-and, as an earnest of his interest and confidence in it, placed several
-thousand dollars in its keeping. He says: “It seemed fitting to cast in
-my lot with my brother freedmen and help build up an institution which
-represented the thrift and economy of my people to so striking an
-advantage, for the more millions accumulated there, I thought, the more
-consideration and respect would be shown to the colored people by the
-whole country.”
-
-At first he was not active in his new office. He seldom attended the
-board meetings. The men in charge were of so high a character and had
-brought the bank up to such rank that his faith in it was well-nigh
-absolute. He was surprised when soon notified that he had been elected
-president. Before assuming this post, in 1871, he asked for a statement
-of the bank’s affairs, not because he was suspicious, but that he might
-the more intelligently take hold of his new duties. He received
-assurances from the officers that everything was in excellent condition
-but he at once began a wholesale policy of retrenchment in the expenses
-of management. From the showing made by those in a position to know and
-to be believed, Mr. Douglass felt so confident that everything was as it
-appeared to be that he loaned the bank $10,000 of his own money, until
-it could realize on a part of its securities. Soon afterward several
-things connected with the bank’s management excited his distrust. The
-money loaned by him was not repaid so promptly as it should have been;
-some of the trustees had removed their own deposits and opened accounts
-with other banks; and the new president discovered that through
-dishonest agents, heavy losses were sustained in the South; that there
-was a discrepancy in the accounts amounting to about $40,000; that the
-“reserve” which the bank by its charter was obliged to maintain was
-entirely exhausted. All this Mr. Douglass learned after he had been
-president for only three months. Being convinced that things were
-rapidly going from bad to worse, he immediately reported the condition
-of the bank to the Finance Committee of the United States Senate. The
-trustees upon whose figures and reports Mr. Douglass relied for his
-action, now tried to retract their statements and did their utmost to
-stay the hand of the government, but the Senate committee accepted his
-representations and immediately proceeded to bring the bank to the end
-of its remarkable career.
-
-Mr. Douglass did not take advantage of his private knowledge of its
-insolvency to remove his $2,000 on deposit, as some trustees had done.
-In this, as in other things, he acted with perfect openness and absolute
-honesty. Nevertheless the bank’s troubles brought to him no end of
-bitter criticism. The number of open accounts at the time of failure was
-over 60,000 and the total amount deposited during the period of its
-existence was about $57,000,000.
-
-Bad management may truthfully be written on the face of this greatest
-single setback to the Negro’s progress. Viewed in the light of the
-condition of these people, striving by might and main to promote their
-own interests, the failure of the Freedmen’s Bank was little less than a
-crime. The mischief had all been done before Mr. Douglass took charge of
-the institution. As he says: “Not a dollar of its millions was loaned by
-me or with my approval. The fact is, and all investigation will show,
-that I was married to a corpse. When I became connected with the bank I
-had a tolerably fair name for honest dealing. I had expended in the
-publication of my paper in Rochester thousands of dollars annually and
-had often to depend upon my credit to bridge over immediate wants. But
-no man here or elsewhere can say that I ever wronged him out of one
-cent.”
-
-This miserable failure distressed Mr. Douglass more than any other man
-in the country, because he saw how wide-spread would be the loss of
-confidence in him and in his people. The mere fact that his own
-conscience was clear and that his prompt action prevented further losses
-did not soften his disappointment. On the contrary, the subject
-continued to be a source of public bitterness and suspicion for many
-years, but he was large enough to grow out of and beyond any evil
-effects arising from it, so far as his own standing and reputation were
-concerned.
-
-Important as was the Freedmen’s Bank, both as a success and as a
-failure, it was but a small part of the many evidences that the black
-race was everywhere awake to the fact that it was living in a new era.
-The transformation of the Negro’s status from that of a quasi-denizen to
-that of a full-fledged citizen of America was a revolution of
-far-reaching import, but it was accompanied by little demonstration. The
-only proof that a great change had been brought about was the eagerness
-with which the colored people attempted to realize all the benefits
-belonging to full citizenship. Up to this time, of course, they had
-never had any part in politics, but it did not take them long to learn
-the game. Educated Negroes and those who had but little education, very
-quickly mastered its tricks and made the most of their opportunities. In
-every Southern state colored men were easily elected to the state
-legislatures and to other high offices.
-
-In Louisiana, Oscar J. Dunn, P. B. S. Pinchback, and C. C. Antoine; in
-South Carolina, Alonzo J. Ransier and Robert H. Gleaves; and in
-Mississippi, Alexander Davis, were elected Lieutenant-Governors. Colored
-men were also chosen for important county and town offices;—there were
-Negro sheriffs, county clerks, justices of the peace. To this period
-also belongs the election of the only two colored men ever given seats
-in the United States Senate, Hiram R. Revels and Blanche K. Bruce, of
-Mississippi. In the lower house of Congress, nearly every state in the
-South was represented by Negroes. In addition to these elective offices
-of honor and distinction, a large number of the leaders of the race held
-appointive Federal offices, as postmasters, and as collectors of customs
-and internal revenue, and for the first time in the history of the
-United States, colored men were appointed to diplomatic positions.
-
-In recent years, students and writers of the Reconstruction period, have
-indulged in a good deal of unmerited abuse of the colored men who, for a
-brief season, and without previous training, under the leadership of
-white politicians, held political posts. It is a deplorable fact that
-too many inferior persons were elected to fill important state and
-county offices in the reconstructed states. It is quite true that the
-colored citizen voted for unfit men of his own race because there was no
-one else to vote for. This same freedman would more willingly have used
-his franchise for a white man of character and ability, if he had had
-the opportunity. The fact is that democracy does not stand still for
-want of fit men, whether in the Bowery district in New York or in the
-Black Belt of South Carolina. The Negroes who were elected to Congress,
-however, were, with but few exceptions, men of character and superior
-intelligence. B. K. Bruce of Mississippi, John R. Lynch, Robert Brown
-Elliot, A. J. Ransier, and Robert Smalls were highly creditable
-representatives of a race that had just emerged from the night of
-slavery. In fact, it is surprising that there were any colored men in
-the South who had enough spirit and intelligence even to aspire to the
-things that but yesterday were beyond their reach. It is also worthy of
-note that among the Negroes holding positions of dignity and trust,
-there were only a few cases in which that trust was knowingly betrayed.
-
-The eagerness with which colored men, of any ability at all, sought
-public posts was largely due to the fact that there were few places open
-to honorable ambitions, outside of public office, to which they could
-aspire. Not many at that time had any training for school-teaching or
-the professions. Politics was the one door that opened most widely to
-Negroes of ability. The people at large seemed to enjoy the novelty of
-seeing these new citizens of the country so quickly take their places in
-the civil service of the government, and wear whatever honors they could
-win. The same sentiment that forced the Fourteenth and Fifteenth
-Amendments into the Constitution of the United States, was gratified
-when educated and eloquent ex-slaves took their seats in both branches
-of Congress.
-
-While it lasted, this was all very pleasing, hopeful, and interesting,
-but a reaction was bound to come. The constituency behind these
-representative leaders lacked the necessary intelligence, knowledge, and
-business experience. By such an electorate men may be chosen to power,
-but they cannot long be held in power.
-
-It was an unfortunate thing, too, that the freedmen learned their first
-lessons in politics when public morals were at so low an ebb. Many sins
-were committed and tolerated in the interest of party success. Many
-desperate men in a spirit at once predatory and partisan, invaded the
-South and attempted to instruct the colored people in ways that were
-dark, but ways that led to party victory. These men were bad models for
-a learning race to follow. Although it was unreasonable to expect these
-newly emancipated people to be superior to their white leaders, yet, by
-recent writers, they have been held accountable for whatever sins were
-committed in this office-holding era.
-
-Mr. Douglass, in the midst of the political prosperity of his race, was
-not misled as to the outcome. No one saw more clearly than he the
-uncertainty of the position to which it had been elevated by recent
-events. While it is true he was at no time a political power in the
-South, the colored men who came into office looked to him for counsel
-and advice. He rejoiced in the many evidences of personal worth and
-talent displayed by Negroes who, for the first time in American history,
-were having some real part in the government of the country. Yet
-experience made him feel and declare that, after all, “the true basis of
-rights is the capacity of the individual.” He urgently pleaded that the
-government should give the freedman education that he might have
-knowledge to use his suffrage in such a manner as to preserve his own
-liberty, and contribute to the public welfare.
-
-Mr. Douglass enjoyed a full share of the honors and responsibilities of
-office-holding. In each succeeding administration after the war, posts
-and places came to him almost as a matter of course, because of his
-prominence as a representative of the enfranchised race. During the
-administration of President Grant, he was appointed one of the
-councilmen of the District of Columbia, and afterward was elected a
-member of the legislature of the District. He soon resigned the last
-position to accept the secretaryship of the commission appointed by
-Grant to visit San Domingo for the purpose of negotiating a treaty for
-the annexation of that island to the United States. The commission was
-composed of Senator B. F. Wade, Dr. S. G. Howe, and Andrew D. White,
-President of Cornell University. The country was somewhat startled by
-the innovation of placing a colored man in a position to represent the
-government on so important a mission. Its purpose failed. Opposition on
-the part of Senator Sumner and other influential Republicans was of the
-most bitter and uncompromising sort.
-
-The political feud that arose from General Grant’s San Domingan policy
-carried many men out of the Republican party. Mr. Douglass was placed in
-an awkward position in accepting the appointment, because his great
-friend, Senator Sumner, was the leader of the opposition to the
-President’s plan of annexation. He admired and was personally attached
-to both because of their heroic services in the cause of freedom and
-citizenship for his people. Explaining his attitude, he said: “I am free
-to say that, had I been guided only by the promptings of my heart, I
-should, in this controversy, have followed Charles Sumner. He was not
-only the most clear-sighted, brave, and uncompromising friend of my race
-who had ever stood upon the floor of the Senate, but he was to me a
-loved, honored, and precious personal friend.”
-
-After Senator Sumner had arraigned President Grant in a notable speech
-in the Senate, Mr. Douglass happened to be a caller at the White House
-and was asked by the President what he now thought of his friend from
-Massachusetts. True to his feelings, Douglass frankly replied that, in
-his opinion, the Senator was sincere in his position, believing that in
-opposing annexation he defended the cause of the colored race, as he had
-always done. “I saw that my reply was not satisfactory,” Douglass
-observes, “and I said, ‘What do you think, Mr. President, of Senator
-Sumner?’ He replied with some feeling, ‘I think he is mad.’”
-
-By his perfect frankness, Mr. Douglass was able to retain the respect
-and confidence of both men. He agreed with President Grant in his
-annexation policy and had, at the same time, a special fondness for the
-Massachusetts Senator. He frequently dined with the latter and they were
-often seen walking arm in arm in the corridors of the Capitol, while
-Douglass embraced every opportunity to sound the praises of his friend.
-In an address delivered at New Orleans before a convention of colored
-men, during this Grant-Sumner feud, he said: “There is now at Washington
-a man who represents the future and is a majority in himself,—a man at
-whose feet Grant learns wisdom. That man is Charles Sumner. I know them
-both; they are great men, but Sumner is as steady as the north star; he
-is no flickering light. For twenty-five years he has worked for the
-Republican party and I hope I may cease forever, if I cease to give all
-honor to Charles Sumner.” And later he said: “As a man of integrity and
-truth, Charles Sumner was high above suspicion, and not all the Grants
-in Christendom will rob him of his well-earned character.”
-
-Notwithstanding his repeatedly declared loyalty to the Senator, Mr.
-Douglass was found in the ranks doing valiant service for the reëlection
-of General Grant for a second term. His coöperation was needed in some
-quarters, because the colored voters were not a little confused when
-such stalwart friends as Sumner, Senator Trumbull, of Illinois; Carl
-Schurz, of Missouri; and Horace Greeley, of New York, were found in the
-“camp of the enemy,” fighting the Republican party. The National
-Convention of Colored Men, held in New Orleans in April, 1872, affords
-an interesting example of how puzzling was the split in the Republican
-organization to the average Negro voter. This was a very large and
-representative body. The members were in a state of grave apprehension,
-on account of the division in the ranks of the black man’s party. Many
-of the leading delegates in attendance were uncertain to whom their
-allegiance should be given. It was difficult for a colored man in those
-days not to be with Sumner, right or wrong.
-
-It was here that Mr. Douglass demonstrated his power as a political
-leader. His speech as president of the convention was a notable effort.
-It was telegraphed in full to the New York _Herald_, and throughout the
-country it was widely circulated and read, as a campaign document. It
-did more than any other one thing to hold the colored people in party
-lines. In addition to this, Douglass took an active part in the ensuing
-struggle, and no orator in the Grant-Greeley contest was more popular
-than he. To the black voter, who wanted to follow the Liberal
-Republicans led by Senator Sumner, he urged that there was “no path out
-of the Republican party that did not lead directly into the camp of the
-Democratic party—away from our friends, directly to our enemies.” It was
-in this campaign, too, that he made use of the well-known party
-aphorism, “The Republican party is the ship, and all else is the sea.”
-
-What was more important and interesting than any other thing in this
-contest, so far as Mr. Douglass was concerned, was the singular
-recognition shown him by the Republicans of New York, who placed his
-name on the ticket as one of the electors of that state. No other
-colored man in the history of the country had ever been so honored. When
-the electoral college met in Albany, he was commissioned to carry the
-New York vote to the capital of the nation.
-
-Though he had done valiant service for the reëlection of General Grant,
-Mr. Douglass neither asked nor received any reward in the form of an
-office. At that time there were but few honors in the gift of the
-President that could be considered within the reach of a colored man.
-The one diplomatic post which he could have obtained for the asking—as
-minister to Hayti—he made no effort to get, but generously supported his
-friend E. D. Bassett, of Philadelphia, for it. Mr. Bassett was a man of
-fine attainments and exceptionally well qualified for the office. This
-act of deference to the claims of others was characteristic of Mr.
-Douglass in all of his relationships to the prominent Negroes of his
-generation.
-
-In 1877, and after the election and inauguration of President Hayes, the
-whole country was more or less startled by the announcement that
-Frederick Douglass had been appointed Marshal of the District of
-Columbia. This office was one of much political and social
-responsibility, and the appointment of an ex-slave produced a sensation
-in Washington. As Mr. Douglass says, “It came upon the people of the
-District as a great surprise and almost a punishment, and provoked
-something like a scream, I will not say a yell, of popular displeasure.”
-This was not an exaggerated statement of the public feeling directed
-against the appointment. Plans were set on foot to secure the defeat of
-his nomination in the United States Senate. It seemed impossible for the
-people at the capital to view the President’s action in any other way
-than as the degradation of an exalted office. They were sure that Mr.
-Douglass would use his place to “Africanize the District courts”; and
-the great social functions of the White House, with a Negro as “Lord
-High Chamberlain,” would become the laughing-stock of the enlightened
-world.
-
-If Mr. Douglass had been a man of less tact and intelligence, and had
-not occupied so high a place in popular esteem, he could not have
-withstood the strength and bitterness of the opposition. His good
-standing, in spite of his color, saved him and the Hayes administration
-from a humiliating surrender to popular prejudice. When his name reached
-the Senate, it was confirmed without serious discussion. Senator
-Conkling had charge of the matter, and swept away all opposition in a
-perfect storm of eloquent ridicule of the reasons presented for
-rejection. Unfortunately, the Senate’s action did not wholly end the
-agitation. Every word and act of Mr. Douglass’s was scrutinized for some
-proof of his unfitness. Shortly after the confirmation of his
-appointment, he delivered an address in the city of Baltimore, taking as
-his theme “Our National Capital.” It was an interesting mixture of
-praise and criticism, though in no way the result of recent occurrences,
-for he had delivered the same speech in Washington some months before
-and it provoked no discussion. He was, therefore, greatly surprised to
-find, when he returned to the capital, that the old animosity which had
-spent itself in attempting to defeat his appointment, was again aroused.
-The objectionable portions of his Baltimore lecture were quoted and
-commented upon in terms of unqualified bitterness. An effort was made to
-induce the sureties on his bond to withdraw, and in this way disqualify
-him to act in his official capacity. Strong pressure was brought to bear
-on the President to relieve the capital of the nation of the
-insufferable offense of an official who had so little sense of the
-proprieties as to hold up Washington and its citizens to public
-ridicule. All this, however, proved to be of no effect. His bondsmen,
-one of whom was a wealthy and prominent Democrat of the District, could
-not be persuaded to embarrass the Negro marshal by withdrawing their
-names. Hayes was likewise firm in resisting all efforts to remove Mr.
-Douglass, who refers gratefully to the President as follows: “When all
-Washington was in an uproar, and a wild clamor rent the air for my
-removal from the office of marshal, on account of the lecture delivered
-by me in Baltimore, and when petitions were flowing in upon him
-demanding my degradation, he nobly rebuked the mad spirit of persecution
-by openly declaring his purpose to retain me in my place.”
-
-Douglass’s successful fight in retaining his position of honor was
-interesting, not so much because of his personal standing, as because it
-was typical of the whole struggle of his race, since emancipation, to
-win their way into the confidences of the American people by proving
-themselves capable of using their liberty and their citizenship in a
-proper manner.
-
-If Mr. Douglass had been sacrificed to the demands of popular prejudice,
-it would have served as a disqualifying precedent in the matter of
-future opportunities of colored men with honorable ambitions. In a short
-while, all opposition was quieted, and the new marshal pursued the
-routine of his duties without hindrance or serious embarrassment. The
-judges and attorneys of the District soon learned to treat the Negro
-official with respect and courtesy. None of the awful things predicted
-came to pass, and the powers that stood behind him and were responsible
-for him were wholly vindicated.
-
-During the trying ordeal from which he had so successfully emerged, Mr.
-Douglass complained somewhat petulantly that “no colored man in the city
-uttered one public word in defense or extenuation of me or my Baltimore
-speech, except Dr. Charles B. Purvis.” He was always sensitive to the
-least evidence of opposition or slight on the part of his own people.
-For a man who had done so much for his race at a time when it was unable
-to do anything for itself, it was, perhaps, quite natural for him to
-feel as he did, now that so many voices were lifted against him.
-Whatever hostility or indifference the colored people in the District
-exhibited toward Mr. Douglass, was probably due to jealousy of his
-leadership and a professed chagrin on account of the alleged willingness
-on his part to accept the office with the abridgment of the social
-privileges enjoyed by previous marshals.
-
-His answer to these complaints was such as to satisfy any reasonable
-person that it meant no surrender of principle. All the functions that
-legally belonged to his office he performed. The ornamental duties that
-had grown up by custom and usage, he willingly left to others. He had
-enjoyed more social opportunities than any colored man in the country
-and he possessed infinite tact and a fine sense of discrimination as to
-rights and privileges. Frequently while he was marshal, he was called
-upon to introduce distinguished strangers to the President. He said: “I
-was ever a welcome visitor at the Executive Mansion on state occasions
-and on all others while Rutherford B. Hayes was President of the United
-States.”
-
-As time passed, his own people, as well as other men in Washington, came
-to admire Douglass’s good sense as well as his fine bearing on all
-occasions. The proudest event in his official life was associated with
-the inauguration of General James A. Garfield as President of the United
-States. The Marshal of the District of Columbia was called upon to act
-an important part in the greatest of all national ceremonies. He was
-brought into touch with the retiring as well as the incoming President.
-He had the honor of escorting them both from the chamber of the United
-States Senate to the east front of the Capitol where the oath of office
-was to be taken by President Garfield and where he delivered his
-inaugural address to a vast concourse of people.
-
-In speaking of that experience, Douglass says with pardonable pride:
-
-“I felt myself standing on new ground, on a height never before trodden
-by any of my people, one heretofore occupied only by members of the
-Caucasian race.... I deemed the event highly important as a new
-circumstance in my career, as a new recognition of my class, and as a
-new step in the progress of the nation. Personally, it was a striking
-contrast to my early condition. Yonder I was an unlettered slave,
-toiling under the ‘Negro breaker’; here I was the United States Marshal
-of the capital of the nation, having under my care and guidance the
-sacred persons of an ex-President and the President-elect of a nation of
-sixty millions of people, and was armed with a nation’s power to arrest
-any arm raised against them. While I was not insensible or indifferent
-to the fact that I was treading the high places of the land, I was not
-conscious of any unsteadiness of head or heart. I was a United States
-Marshal by accident. I was no less Frederick Douglass, identified with a
-proscribed class, whose perfect and practical equality with other
-American citizens, was yet far down the steps of time. Yet I was not
-sorry to have this brief authority for I rejoiced in the fact that a
-colored man could occupy this height and that the precedent was
-valuable.”
-
-Thus it was that Mr. Douglass esteemed every honor or favor earned and
-received by him, to mean some fresh recognition of the worth of the
-Negro race. He sustained a very close and cordial relationship to Mr.
-Garfield. He had done effective service in the campaign that resulted in
-the election of the new President, whose fine abilities and robust
-Americanism he greatly admired. Shortly after the inauguration, Mr.
-Douglass was summoned to the White House. Garfield wished to discuss
-with this acknowledged leader of the Negro race his policy in reference
-to appointments of colored men to office. He assured Mr. Douglass of his
-intention to place capable colored men in a higher grade of positions in
-the diplomatic service, and he asked if, in Douglass’s opinion, nations
-composed of white people would object to receiving colored men as
-representatives of the American government. He also assured Douglass
-that Senator Conkling’s wish for his (Douglass’s) reappointment as
-Marshal of the District of Columbia would be granted with pleasure. The
-Negro leader found the position thoroughly congenial to him, and it was
-a matter of satisfaction to realize that he had so successfully lived
-down past objections that no one now raised a voice against him. But for
-reasons that were never divulged to him, he was displaced, and another
-was appointed to the post.
-
-Though he was keenly disappointed and chagrined, Douglass believed in
-Mr. Garfield and was not inclined to censure him because of his broken
-promise. He had strong faith that the President was about to carry out a
-policy of recognition of the colored race which would be more liberal
-than that of any of his predecessors. He felt that the colored people at
-this time needed a firm friend. He clearly saw that his race in respect
-to its rights of citizenship was slipping back from the high position
-occupied by it ten years prior to this time. He feared that the reaction
-which began to set in after the withdrawal of Federal troops from the
-South in 1876 would carry his people to something like political serfdom
-unless some strong hand would come to their aid.
-
-The assurances now given to him by President Garfield that the Negro and
-his cause would receive fair and honest treatment relieved his anxiety
-despite his own displacement, and he confidently expected that the
-administration of General Garfield would mean much to Negro progress in
-all directions.
-
-Alas for human hopes! Before the big-hearted man could put his good
-intentions into effect, the assassin had done his evil work. Mr.
-Douglass, like every one else close to the President, was overwhelmed
-with grief. He said: “Few men in this country felt more keenly than I
-the shock created by the assassination of President Garfield and few men
-had better reason for this feeling.”
-
-When Vice-President Arthur succeeded to the presidency, Mr. Douglass was
-appointed Recorder of Deeds of the District of Columbia. This was a
-lucrative office and a good deal of patronage was attached to it. Being
-the first colored man to be appointed to the post, he had to face the
-opposition that usually attaches to an innovation; but the objections
-were not of a serious nature and soon subsided.
-
-He continued in this place for five years. When Mr. Cleveland came to
-the presidency he rather expected to be removed summarily; but the
-Democratic chief magistrate proved to be less of a party man than either
-the Recorder or the average Republican expected. The new President was
-too high-minded to be a mere partisan, and to Mr. Douglass’s surprise,
-he was treated with much respect and kindness. He and his wife were
-invited to all public functions given at the White House and Mr.
-Cleveland in every way showed that he shared the public esteem in which
-the great Negro was so universally held. He was allowed to occupy the
-position for quite a year under the Democratic administration. Then
-instead of removing or asking for his resignation in the usually abrupt
-way, the President graciously wrote to know when it would be convenient
-for him to give up the post.
-
-Mr. Cleveland further indicated his kindly regard for the colored people
-of the country by promising them that his election would not mean a
-curtailment of their liberties, as some of them feared. For this
-assurance Mr. Douglass made public acknowledgment. The statements of the
-President were timely and quieting, because for the first time in twenty
-years, the more ignorant of the Negroes were somewhat panic-stricken.
-Speaking of their fears, Douglass testified “to the painful apprehension
-and distress felt by my people in the South from the return to power of
-the old Democratic and slavery party. To many of them, it seemed that
-they were left naked to their enemies, in fact, lost; that Mr.
-Cleveland’s election meant the revival of the slave-power and that they
-would now again be reduced to slavery and the lash. The misery brought
-to the South by this wide-spread alarm can hardly be described or
-measured. The wail of despair for a time from the late bondsmen was
-deep, bitter and heart-rending.... It was well for the poor people in
-this condition that Mr. Cleveland himself sent word South to allay their
-fear and remove their agony.”
-
-Mr. Douglass always cherished a very sincere admiration for President
-Cleveland, for this and other reasons, and regarded it as highly
-fortunate that a man so just and non-partisan should be elected as the
-first Democratic President after emancipation. As a result of his fair
-treatment, the American Negroes first learned that the term Democratic
-did not necessarily mean for them loss of rights and citizenship. In
-fact, his liberal policy caused a great many of the more intelligent
-colored men very seriously to consider the advisability of a division of
-the Negro vote between the two great parties. Men of the high standing
-of Archibald H. Grimké, of Boston, Mass., and W. M. E. Matthews, of New
-York, argued with great plausibility that one way to convince the
-American people of his qualifications for citizenship, would be for the
-Negro to learn to vote for principles rather than for party leaders.
-They insisted that to take the pith out of the Democratic opposition to
-his appearance in politics, a goodly portion of the voters should join
-themselves to that party. It was unfortunate that this tendency to
-political independence on the part of the enlightened colored men could
-not have been encouraged. However natural and human it may be for the
-Negro people to be allied wholly to one of two political parties, it is
-nevertheless a serious hindrance to the colored man’s political freedom
-that he must continue to regard the Republican party as composed wholly
-of his friends and the Democratic party as composed wholly of his
-enemies. Mr. Douglass openly confessed his inability to take this new
-stand in politics, notwithstanding his admiration for Mr. Cleveland and
-his respect for the motives of the few colored men in the country who
-were independent enough to break away from party control. Though he
-personally could not join the movement he regarded it as a sign of
-progress for colored men of character and intellect to say that they
-cared more for their race than for party, and more for their country
-than for their race.
-
-The last public office held by Mr. Douglass under the United States
-government was that of Minister Resident and Consul General to the
-Republic of Hayti. This seemed a fitting climax to the long list of
-honors that came to him, not so much as a reward of party service as for
-his own high deserving. The appointment was made by President Harrison
-and was wholly unsought. Douglass had, of course, and as usual, taken an
-active part in the campaign of 1888. The tariff was the main subject of
-contention and it was more than hinted to him that he was expected to
-make the most of this issue. He nevertheless had his own way, and
-everywhere he insisted that the paramount issue was the rights of men.
-
-On the stump he was as popular as ever; on all sides he found the people
-deeply interested in his fervent pleas for justice to his race. Speaking
-of his efforts in the last political campaign in which he took a
-prominent part, he said: “I held that the soul of the nation was in this
-question and that the gain of all the gold in the world would not
-compensate for the loss of the national soul. National honor is the soul
-of the nation and when this is lost all is lost.... As with an
-individual, so with a nation. There is a time when it may be properly
-asked, What does it profit a nation to gain the whole world and lose its
-own soul?”
-
-In accepting the honor of representing this country in Hayti Frederick
-Douglass was about to realize a long cherished wish,—an opportunity to
-see and study the only republic established and carried on by black men
-in the Western world. In some respects his appointment at another time
-would have been more agreeable. Very much to his surprise and chagrin,
-and for causes of which he was wholly innocent, it was bitterly opposed.
-Antagonism to him came almost wholly from the East and was confined to
-interests that were bent upon obtaining valuable concessions from Hayti.
-Certain New York newspapers tried to make it appear that he was unfitted
-for the place, and insisted that the people wanted a white man to
-represent the United States, although every representative from this
-government to Hayti since 1869 had been a colored man. It was also urged
-that Douglass would not be well received, because at one time he favored
-the annexation of San Domingo.
-
-Even after his appointment was confirmed by the United States Senate,
-the opposition still pursued him. For example, it was said that the
-captain of the ship designated by the government to convey the new
-minister to Port-au-Prince, refused to take him on board because of his
-complexion; that after he arrived at the capital of Hayti he was snubbed
-by the officials for the same reason; and that it was found he had not
-been duly accredited.
-
-In these statements there was scarcely a grain of truth. There was no
-insult to Mr. Douglass by the captain of the boat; there was no lack of
-cordiality and respect on the part of the Haytians on account of his
-color; and there was no embarrassment of any kind to warrant the
-peculiar and insistent opposition that followed him from the moment his
-appointment was announced. There were two issues of commanding interest
-at this time which made the position of our Minister to Port-au-Prince a
-trying one. First in importance was a desire on the part of the United
-States to secure by treaty, Môle St. Nicolas as a naval station; and,
-second, a desperate determination by the Clyde Steamship Company to
-obtain from the Haytian government a subsidy of a half-million dollars
-to ply a line of steamers between New York and Hayti.
-
-As an evidence of the mean spirit of Mr. Douglass’s enemies, he was
-grossly misrepresented as being the cause of the failure of the United
-States to obtain the Môle. The great perversion of the real facts
-surrounding the diplomatic efforts on the part of the government to
-procure from Hayti the use of this port, led Mr. Douglass to publish in
-the _North American Review_ for September and October, 1891, a full
-history of his connection with the affair. In this interesting account
-of the negotiations carried on during his official residence in Hayti,
-it will be seen that he was in no way responsible for the result. In the
-first place, he was not vested with authority to arrange with Hayti for
-a United States naval station. He had been there as a representative of
-this government over one year before the matter was taken up. When the
-United States got ready to negotiate a treaty, the subject was entrusted
-wholly to a special agent in the person of Rear-Admiral Gherardi. Mr.
-Douglass’s only instructions were to coöperate with and assist the
-Admiral in every possible way. The news of the appointment of a special
-commissioner by the United States government was viewed by Mr. Douglass
-as “sudden and far from flattering.” It placed him in an unenviable
-light, both before the community of Port-au-Prince and the government of
-Hayti, and made his position very humble, secondary, and subordinate. He
-said: “The situation suggested the resignation of my office as due to my
-honor, but reflection soon convinced me that such a course would subject
-me to misconstruction more hurtful than any which, in the circumstances,
-could justly arise from remaining at my post.”
-
-He cordially and energetically assisted Admiral Gherardi. He secured
-audiences with the President and the Minister of Foreign Affairs of
-Hayti, and did not allow anything like offended dignity to diminish his
-zeal and alacrity in carrying out his instructions.
-
-In the conference, Mr. Douglass supplemented the arguments of the
-commissioner in an earnest appeal in behalf of the United States. He
-urged that the concession asked for by his government, “was in line with
-good neighborhood, and advanced civilization, and in every way
-consistent with Haytian autonomy; that such a concession would be a
-source of strength to Hayti; that national isolation was a worn-out
-policy, and that the true policy of Hayti ought to be to touch the world
-at all points that make for civilization and commerce.”
-
-All arguments, however, failed to overcome the deep-seated suspicion of
-the Haytian people of any proposition to yield even one inch of their
-national dominion. While in Mr. Douglass’s opinion, the negotiations
-were ill-timed, being prejudiced by the previous demands of the agents
-of the Clyde Company, and by the apparent threat in the presence of a
-part of the United States Navy in the Haytian harbor, he yet gave it as
-his deliberate opinion that no earthly power outside of absolute force
-could have obtained for the American government a naval station at Môle
-St. Nicolas.
-
-He also found that Hayti was somewhat suspicious of the United States on
-account of the national prejudice against the color of its citizens.
-While loyal to his own government, Mr. Douglass scarcely blamed them for
-this feeling. He believed in the future of the little republic, and
-said: “Whatever may happen of peace or war, Hayti will remain in the
-firmament of nations and like the north star will shine on, and shine
-forever.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XV
- FURTHER EVIDENCES OF POPULAR ESTEEM, WITH GLIMPSES INTO THE PAST
-
-
-The foregoing chapters contain the important incidents and events in the
-life of Frederick Douglass. He lived in a great transitional period,
-and, in his struggle to gain his own freedom, he personified the
-historic events which took place during that time. His life was so
-wholly under the public eye, and what he did and stood for during more
-than fifty years, were so much an integral portion of these years, that
-it is impossible to obtain an estimate of the man apart from the history
-of slavery. Frederick Douglass and Anti-slavery, are almost
-interchangeable terms. In himself he was both the argument and
-demonstration of the things that gave interest and meaning to his life
-and times. Yet he had another side not exhibited in the history of which
-he was a part and which he helped to make. Much of a personal nature
-that would add interest to his life and partly explain the sources of
-his strength as a leader of men, can be added to the portrait.
-
-The limitations of this volume will permit only a brief outline of some
-of the things that Frederick Douglass said and did during the last
-thirty years of his life, which chronologically belonged to previous
-chapters, but which for the sake of their peculiar significance are
-reserved for this.
-
-As may be inferred from what has appeared in the course of this
-narrative, Frederick Douglass was a more than ordinarily interesting
-personality. He was a figure to attract attention anywhere, and
-especially so during the last twenty-five years of his life. He was over
-six feet in height, broad-shouldered, well-proportioned, and his
-movements had all the directness and grace of a man who had been bred a
-prince rather than a slave. His features were broad, strong, and
-impressive. His complexion was that of a mulatto. His head was
-strikingly large, and crowned with an abundant crop of white hair of
-almost silken fineness. His eyes were brown and mildly animated. His
-voice was strong, but of mellow tone. When he was aroused, however, it
-would fairly thunder with the passionate earnestness of the man. In
-conversation he was delightful. His manner was graceful and wholly free
-from personal mannerisms. His mental and moral faculties were well
-balanced. He was a man without technical education, yet he had more than
-ordinary learning. All that he knew was acquired outside of schoolrooms
-and without school teachers. His great library bore witness to his love
-of books. In the history of governments and of races, and in mental
-philosophy and poetry, he found special delight. No trained elocutionist
-could recite verse with better effect. He was especially fond of Byron,
-Burns, Coleridge, and Pierpont.
-
-He was always quick to recognize ability in one of his race, and so had
-a peculiar fondness and interest in Paul Laurence Dunbar, who, at his
-death, was just beginning to be known as a poet, and who received his
-first real encouragement from Frederick Douglass.
-
-He had an unfailing memory, and consequently a good command of
-everything he ever saw, heard, or read. He was liked and honored by men
-and women, not only because he was interesting, but also because he was
-singularly free from crotchets, idiosyncrasies, and ill-temper. He was
-of a lovable disposition, and especially so in the latter days of his
-life. The all too common character blemishes of selfishness, envy, and
-jealousy were never charged against him. His whole nature was keyed to
-high, generous impulses. He loved the right, and hated wrong in any
-form.
-
-No man of his prominence was freer from vices: he was of temperate
-habits, clean speech, and personal rectitude. His sense of honor was not
-partial, but a controlling force in all of his relationships to men and
-things.
-
-He was also fortunately free from family troubles, except the loss by
-death of a beloved little daughter, whose few gentle and beautiful years
-had been his delight, a sorrow which deeply shadowed the earlier period
-of his public career. His wife, who had helped him to gain his freedom,
-devoted her life to his comfort and to the happiness of his home. His
-three stalwart sons, Lewis, Charles, and Frederick, Jr., honored him by
-lives of usefulness, and there was always the closest intimacy between
-him and them. His oldest girl, named Rosa, was very dear to him. She
-grew up by his side as a faithful helper in his work as well as a
-devoted daughter. She is widely known and loved for her culture and
-unselfish disposition. In short, Frederick Douglass’s family was worthy
-of him. If by his deeds he brought to them honor and opportunity, he
-lived long enough to see his example and precepts honored again in them.
-
-His home in Cedar Hill, overlooking the Capitol, was a delightful spot.
-Everything about it bespoke the character of the man. The broad grounds,
-shaded with trees, the well-cultivated garden, all told of his love of
-nature. Within the ample house there was a quiet, restful refinement,
-revealing the taste and habits of the scholar. Books, busts, and
-pictures all bore witness to that instinctive thirst for culture which
-no one who knew him well could fail to recognize. He had an
-extraordinary passion for the violin, and, although he did not place a
-very high estimate upon his own ability, yet he, as well as his nearest
-friends, received much enjoyment from his knowledge of the use of this
-instrument.
-
-In later years he found a special delight in the fact that his grandson,
-Joseph Douglass, exhibited a decided taste and a real genius for the
-violin. A more affecting picture of the power of music could scarcely be
-imagined than that of the old man sitting and listening with rapt and
-tearful attention when this boy played for him some of his favorite
-tunes.
-
-But perhaps these glimpses of the personality of Frederick Douglass are
-sufficient to suggest that, behind the great orator, the active
-politician, the anxious leader in a critical period, there was a real
-man, whose domestic tastes and disciplined heart give an added value to
-his public life. It is not at all surprising that one thus gifted should
-have had many intimates among the best people of his generation. The
-leading statesmen, educators, and literary men were counted as his close
-and personal friends. Behind the respect that was felt for his natural
-talents and his unusual achievements was a sincere admiration and even
-fondness for the large and warmhearted nature which could laugh and cry
-and be touched by the social delights of home and fireside. He was a man
-of opinions, of ideals, of imagination, and had the gift of adequate
-expression for every thought and emotion.
-
-After the death of his first wife, Mr. Douglass married again, in 1884,
-and for this step he was severely criticised. The fact that his second
-wife, Miss Helen Pitts, was a white woman caused something like a
-revulsion of feeling throughout the entire country. His own race
-especially condemned him, and the notion seemed to be quite general that
-he had made the most serious mistake of his life. Just how deep-seated
-was the sentiment of white and black people alike against amalgamation
-has never been so clearly demonstrated as in this case. Douglass was
-sorely hurt by the many unkind things said about his marriage by members
-of his own race.
-
-The woman whom he married he had known and admired for many years. She
-had helped him in various ways in his literary work. She belonged to one
-of the best families in western New York, and in following the natural
-impulse of his attachment, he failed to take into consideration the
-offense his act might give to public feeling. The resentment felt by the
-people because of his disregard of its unwritten law never entirely died
-out in his lifetime, but he himself got over the personal discomfiture
-of it. In addressing a large audience of white and colored people in
-Springfield, Mo., in the fall of 1893, he referred to this incident in
-the following words: “I am strongly of the opinion that you will want me
-to say something concerning my second marriage. I will tell you: My
-first wife, you see, was the color of my mother, and my second wife the
-color of my father; you see I wanted to be perfectly fair to both
-races.” This clever bit of raillery on a very delicate subject put him
-on good terms with his audience and if any were inclined to think the
-less of him because of his marriage the fact did not then appear.
-
-In the period from 1865 to the Columbian Exposition at Chicago, in 1893,
-Mr. Douglass was interested in many things. He made various addresses
-outside of the range of politics, and was busy to the limit of his
-waning strength. What he wrote found ready acceptance in important
-publications, and his absence from any great national gathering was a
-matter of regret.
-
-Among the many tokens of respect that continued to come to him from all
-parts of the country, he cherished none so much as the tribute paid to
-him by the city of Rochester, his home during the twenty-five formative
-years of his career. In the name of the city, some of its leading
-citizens caused to be placed in Sibley’s Hall, at Rochester University,
-a noble bust of Frederick Douglass. It was a gracious recognition of the
-esteem in which he was held by the people who had had the best
-opportunity of knowing him. The Rochester _Democrat and Chronicle_
-expressed the sentiment of the city in the following eulogy written at
-the time:
-
- “Frederick Douglass can hardly be said to have risen to greatness on
- account of the opportunities which the republic offers to self-made
- men, and concerning which we are apt to talk with an abundance of
- self-gratulation. It sought to fetter his mind equally with his body.
- For him it builded no schoolhouse, and for him it erected no church.
- So far as he was concerned, freedom was mockery, and law was the
- instrument of tyranny. In spite of law and gospel, despite of statutes
- which enthralled him and opportunities which jeered at him, he made
- himself, by trampling on the laws and breaking through the thick
- darkness that encompassed him. There is no sadder commentary upon
- human slavery than the life of Frederick Douglass. He put it under his
- feet and stood erect in the majesty of his intellect; but how many
- intellects, brilliant and powerful as his, it stamped upon and
- crushed, no mortal can tell until the secret of its terrible despotism
- is fully revealed. Thanks to the conquering might of American freedom,
- such sad beginnings of such illustrious lives as that of Frederick
- Douglass are no longer possible; and that they are no longer possible,
- is largely due to him, who when his lips were unlocked, became a
- deliverer of his people. Not alone did his voice proclaim
- emancipation. Eloquent as was that voice, his life in its pathos and
- in its grandeur, was more deeply eloquent still; and where shall be
- found, in the annals of humanity, a sweeter rendering of poetic
- justice than that he, who has passed through such vicissitudes of
- degradation and exaltation, has been permitted to behold the
- redemption of his race?
-
- “Rochester is proud to remember that Frederick Douglass was, for many
- years, one of her citizens. He who pointed out the house where
- Douglass lived, hardly exaggerated when he called it the residence of
- the greatest of our citizens, for Douglass must rank as among the
- greatest men, not only of this city, but of the nation as well—great
- in gifts, greater in utilizing them, great in the persuasion of his
- speech, greater in the purpose that informed it.
-
- “Rochester could do nothing more graceful than to perpetuate in marble
- the features of this citizen in her hall of learning; and it is
- pleasant for her to know that he so well appreciates the esteem in
- which he is held here. It was a thoughtful thing for Rochester to do,
- and the response is as heartfelt as the tribute is appropriate.”
-
-Among his notable addresses during the period under review was one
-delivered on Decoration Day in 1871 at Arlington. His theme was “The
-Unknown Loyal Dead.” President Grant, the members of the Cabinet, and a
-large number of the most prominent people of Washington were present,
-and the occasion was unusually impressive. He rose grandly to the need
-of the hour. The oration was in his best vein and is in part as
-follows:—
-
- “Friends and Fellow Citizens:—Tarry here for a moment. My words shall
- be few and simple. The solemn rites of this hour and place call for no
- lengthened speech. There is, in the very air of this resting-ground of
- the unknown dead, a silent, subtle and all-pervading eloquence, far
- more touching, impressive, and thrilling, than living lips have ever
- uttered. Into the measureless depths of every loyal soul it is now
- whispering lessons of all that is precious, priceless, holiest and
- most enduring in human existence.
-
- “Dark and sad will be the hour to this nation when it forgets to pay
- grateful homage to its greatest benefactors. The offering we bring
- to-day is due alike to the patriot soldiers, dead, and their noble
- comrades who still live; for, whether living or dead, whether in time
- or in eternity, the loyal soldiers who imperiled all for country and
- freedom are one and inseparable.
-
- “These unknown heroes whose whitened bones have been piously gathered
- here, and whose green graves we now strew with sweet and beautiful
- flowers, choice emblems alike of pure hearts and brave spirits,
- reached in their glorious career that last highest point of nobleness
- beyond which human power cannot go. They died for their country.
-
- “No loftier tribute can be paid to the most illustrious of all the
- benefactors of mankind than we pay to these unrecognized soldiers when
- we write above their graves this shining epitaph.
-
- “When the dark and vengeful spirit of slavery, always ambitious,
- preferring ‘to rule in Hell than to serve in Heaven’ fired the
- southern heart and stirred all the malign elements of discord; when
- our great republic, the hope of freedom and self-government throughout
- the world, had reached the point of supreme peril; when the union of
- the states was torn and rent asunder at the centre, and the armies of
- a gigantic rebellion came forth with broad blades and bloody hands to
- destroy the very foundation of American society, the unknown braves
- who flung themselves into the yawning chasm, where cannon roared and
- bullets whistled, fought and fell. They died for their country.
-
- “We are sometimes asked, in the name of patriotism, to forget the
- merits of this fearful struggle, and to remember with equal admiration
- those who struck at the nation’s life and those who struck to save it;
- those who fought for slavery and those who fought for liberty and
- justice.
-
- “I am no minister of malice. I would not strike the fallen. I would
- not repel the repentant; but may my right hand forget her cunning and
- my tongue cleave to the roof of my mouth, if I forget the difference
- between the parties to that terrible, protracted and bloody conflict.
-
- “If we ought to forget a war which has filled our land with widows and
- orphans; which has made stumps of men of the very flower of our youth;
- which has sent them on the journey of life armless, legless, maimed
- and mutilated; which has piled up a debt heavier than a mountain of
- gold, swept uncounted thousands of men into bloody graves and planted
- agony at a million hearthstones—I say, if this war is to be forgotten,
- I ask in the name of things sacred, what shall men remember?”
-
-Five years later Mr. Douglass was again honored with an invitation to
-deliver the address in memory of Abraham Lincoln, at Lincoln Park, in
-Washington. The occasion and the man were happily blended. No orator
-ever had a more inspiring theme. The rulers of the nation in the persons
-of President Grant and his Cabinet advisers, members of the United
-States Senate, Justices of the Supreme Court, and a great many high
-officials were present to evidence the importance of the day; and in
-such a company of distinguished people Douglass delivered what many call
-his supreme effort as an orator. The speech later was printed as a
-pamphlet, and extensively read throughout the country.
-
-His closing words addressed to his own people, prescient, as they seemed
-to be of days and dangers as yet but vaguely understood, made an
-ineffaceable impression upon men of his color who heard him:
-
-“We have done a great work for our race to-day. In doing honor to the
-memory of our friend and liberator, we have been doing highest honor to
-ourselves and those who are to come after us. We have been attaching to
-ourselves a name and fame imperishable and immortal. We have also been
-defending ourselves from a blighting scandal, when now it shall be said
-that the colored man is soulless, that he has no appreciation of
-benefits or benefactors; when the foul reproach of ingratitude is hurled
-at us, and it is attempted to scourge us beyond the range of human
-brotherhood, we may calmly point to this monument we have this day
-erected to the memory of Abraham Lincoln.”
-
-In his address before the Tennessee Colored Agricultural and Mechanical
-Association at Nashville, September 18, 1873, he furnished the country
-new evidence of his ability to give instruction, to inspire hope and
-ambition, and to encourage thrift. Though not an agriculturist by
-occupation, his speech can still be used as a manual for the young
-farmer. It, like his other addresses, is full of practical and useful
-maxims. His quotation from Theodore Parker, “All the space between man’s
-mind and God’s mind is crowded with truths which wait to be discovered
-and organized into law for the practice of men,” indicates the tone of
-high hopefulness that ran through all his appeals to the people. “If we
-look abroad over our country and observe the condition of the colored
-people,” he said, “we shall find their greatest want to be regular and
-lucrative employment for their energies. They have secured their
-freedom, it is true, but not the friendship and favor of the people
-around them.... On account of bad treatment, great numbers are driven
-from the country to the larger cities where they quickly learn to
-imitate the vices and follies of the least exemplary whites. Under these
-circumstances, I hail agriculture as a refuge for the oppressed.”
-
-Insisting that the condition of the Negro in this country is
-exceptional, he reminded his hearers that “the farm is our last resort,
-and if we fail here, I do not see how we can succeed elsewhere. We are
-not like the Irish, an organized political power; we are not shrewd like
-the Hebrews, capable of making fortunes by buying and selling old
-clothes.”
-
-The address is rich with maxims that are good to remember and to use as
-rules of conduct; such as:
-
- “Emancipation has liberated the land as well as the people.”
-
- “It is not fertility, but liberty that cultivates a country.”
-
- “The state of Tennessee is now to be cultivated by liberty, by
- knowledge which comes of liberty, by the respectability of labor.”
-
- “Neither the slave nor his master can abandon all at once the deeply
- entrenched errors and habits of centuries.”
-
- “There is no work that men are required to do, which they cannot
- better and more economically do with education than without it.”
-
- “Muscle is mighty but mind is mightier, and there is no field for the
- exercise of mind other than is found in the cultivation of the soul.”
-
- “As a race we have suffered from two very opposite causes,
- disparagement on the one hand and undue praise on the other.”
-
- “An important question to be answered by evidences of our progress is:
- Whether the black man will prove a better master to himself than the
- white master was to him.”
-
- “Accumulate property. This may sound to you like a new gospel. No
- people can ever make any social and mental improvement whose exertions
- are limited. Poverty is our greatest calamity.... On the other hand,
- property, money, if you please, will produce for us the only condition
- upon which any people can rise to the dignity of genuine manhood.”
-
- “Without property there can be no leisure. Without leisure there can
- be no invention, without invention there can be no progress.”
-
- “We can work, and by this means we can retrieve all our losses.”
-
- “Knowledge, wisdom, culture, refinement, manners, are all founded on
- work and the wealth which work brings.”
-
- “In nine cases out of ten a man’s condition is worse by changing his
- location. You would better endeavor to remove the evil from your door
- than to move and leave it there.”
-
- “If you have a few acres, stick to them.”
-
- “Life is too short, time is too valuable, to waste in the experiment
- of seeking new homes. People are about as good in your neighborhood as
- anywhere else in the world, and may need you to make them better.”
-
-The foregoing extracts sufficiently indicate the character and
-importance of this Nashville address. It was quite unlike speeches that
-had been made by most of the colored leaders to their people. While
-emphasizing the importance of hard work, of duties, and patience, he
-indulged in no false hopes and made no extravagant claims. The every-day
-facts, needs, and responsibilities of the people on the soil were, he
-held, the paramount things for men who were beginning their social
-development. In short, it was a strong and stirring call to the Negroes
-to look about them, and not afar, for the instruments and forces that
-must be utilized for their salvation.
-
-Belonging to this latter period of his life, another address, in
-character quite different from the one just referred to, illustrates how
-the colored people have been carried from one extreme of hopefulness to
-the other of despair and uncertainty by the changes in public sentiment
-concerning them.
-
-In 1883 the Supreme Court of the United States rendered a decision
-declaring unconstitutional what was known as the “Civil Rights Bill.”
-This was one of the Reconstruction measures, championed by Senator
-Sumner, and, when brought forward it was regarded by the colored people
-and their friends as a sort of charter of liberty. It undertook to
-prevent discriminations against Negroes in hotels, restaurants, and
-other places of public accommodation. At the time of its enactment it
-was considered a necessary appendage to the Fourteenth and Fifteenth
-Amendments, and the colored people everywhere felt a strong sense of
-protection in its provisions.
-
-When the Supreme Court’s opinion declaring the law, outside of the
-District of Columbia and other national territory, to be null and void,
-was made known, it produced a sensation of alarm and almost despair
-among Negroes everywhere. They saw in this decision a complete reversal
-of the public sentiment that a few years before was so strongly
-favorable to them. They began to lose faith in the potency of the letter
-of the law, either to define or protect their rights. It was a sort of
-rude reminder that, if they would be secure in their rights, they must
-rely upon something else than mere statutes. Here was an apt
-illustration of the maxim that what the law gives, the law can take
-away. In relying upon only this for his salvation, the Negro had been
-suspended between hope and despair, until it seemed to him that there
-was no such thing as stability of sentiment toward him. The first
-impulse was to protest, in the name of all the colored people, not only
-against the letter of the decision, but also against haunting
-implications that they had no rights which the law of the land was bound
-to respect.
-
-The spirit of resentment found adequate expression in a great
-mass-meeting arranged for and held in the city of Washington in 1883.
-Frederick Douglass was selected, as a matter of course, as the one
-colored man in the country who could best voice the feelings of the
-people affected by the decision. The other speaker was the eloquent
-Robert G. Ingersoll. The meeting was a notable one in every respect. The
-most distinguished leaders of the race were there, and the audience was
-large and earnest. There were present, too, a great number of prominent
-white people who sympathized with the colored race. The address of Mr.
-Douglass was one of the most interesting ever made by him. In it he
-showed his ability to put into the most telling form the arguments with
-which it seemed possible at that time to counteract, to some extent, the
-moral effect of the decision upon the colored and the white communities.
-His speech showed a wide acquaintance with the principles of the law and
-more than usually profound knowledge of the philosophy of democracy. The
-following extracts will indicate its character, and reflect, no doubt,
-the opinions and sentiments of the meeting and the time:
-
- “It makes us feel as if some one was stamping on the graves of our
- mothers, or desecrating our sacred temples.”
-
- “We have been, as a class, grievously wounded in the house of our
- friends.”
-
- “This decision has swept over the land like a cyclone, leaving moral
- desolation in its track.”
-
- “Inasmuch as the law in question is in favor of liberty and justice,
- it ought to have had the benefit of any doubt which could arise as to
- its strict constitutionality.”
-
- “If any man has come in here with his breast heaving with passion and
- expecting to hear violent denunciation of the Supreme Court on account
- of this decision, he has mistaken the object of this meeting. Its
- judges live, and ought to live, an eagle’s flight beyond the reach of
- fear or favor, praise or blame, profit or loss.”
-
- “In humiliating the colored people of this country, this decision has
- humbled this nation.”
-
- “No man can put a chain about the ankle of his fellow-men without at
- least finding the other end of it about his own neck.”
-
- “Prejudice is a spirit infernal, against which enlightened men should
- wage perpetual war.”
-
- “We want no black Ireland in America. We want no aggrieved class in
- America. Strong as we are without the Negro, we are stronger with him
- than without him.”
-
- “Our legislators, our President, and the judges should have a care
- lest by forcing these people outside the law, they destroy that love
- of country, which in the day of trouble is needful to the nation’s
- defense.”
-
- “Oh, for a Supreme Court of the United States which shall be as true
- to the claims of humanity as the Supreme Court formerly was to the
- demand of slavery.”
-
- “What is a state in the absence of the people who compose it?”
-
- “Land, air, and water do not discriminate. What does it matter to the
- colored citizen that a state may not insult him if the citizen of the
- state may? The decision is a concession to race pride, selfishness,
- and meanness, and will be received with joy by every upholder of caste
- in the land, and for this I deplore and denounce the decision.”
-
-The few addresses just referred to are, in point of the subject-matter
-and the occasions that called them forth, the most important and able
-made by Frederick Douglass after emancipation. On each occasion there
-was a call for the supreme man of the Negro race and there were few,
-except a small group of colored people, to question his right to be so
-regarded.
-
-Frederick Douglass, however, was something more than a “race leader”; he
-was always an eminent citizen of the republic, and as such his interests
-were not wholly rimmed about by the sorrows and aspirations of his own
-people. He was a careful student of his times and had an intelligent
-concern in all the great questions that arose and called for an opinion.
-It was quite in keeping with his cosmopolitan spirit that he should be
-opposed to the policy of our government in excluding the Chinese from
-American shores because, as he said, “I know of no rights of race
-superior to the rights of humanity.” His views on the question, which
-twenty-five years ago was an urgent one, are more fully expressed in the
-following extract from one of his addresses on the subject of the
-“Composite Nation”:—
-
-“Our republic itself is a strong argument in favor of cosmopolitan
-nationality.... Let the Chinaman come; he will help to augment the
-national wealth. He will help to develop our boundless resources; he
-will help to pay off our national debt. He will help to lighten the
-burden of our national taxation. He will give us the benefit of his
-skill as a manufacturer, and as a tiller of the soil in which he is
-unsurpassed. Even the matter of religious liberty, which has cost the
-world more tears, more blood, and more agony than any other interest,
-will be helped by his presence. I know of no church more tolerant, of no
-priesthood, however enlightened, which could safely be trusted with the
-tremendous power which universal conformity would confer. We should
-welcome all men of every shade of religious opinion, as among the best
-means of checking the arrogance and intolerance which are the almost
-inevitable concomitants of general conformity. Liberty always flourishes
-best amid the clash and competition of rival religious creeds.”
-
-Reference has already been made to Douglass’s services to the cause of
-female suffrage. His presence at nearly all of the anniversaries and
-other important gatherings of those who advocated the enfranchisement of
-women was expected and his utterances were warmly received.
-
-In the matter of religion, Mr. Douglass was not strictly orthodox in his
-beliefs, although it will be remembered that during his enslavement he
-found much consolation in the Bible, and was for a time a Methodist
-exhorter. His religious views, as he grew older, underwent a radical
-change. He had no patience with hypocrites. He had seen and heard so
-much that was cruel, unjust, and almost fiendish under the name of
-religion, that his faith in sectarianism was badly shaken. In his early
-anti-slavery addresses, he indulged in many absurd parodies of the pious
-frauds whom he had known. However, he was not an atheist. He had a deep
-religious sense, but was more fully under the influence of the
-theological opinions of Theodore Parker than of any other school of
-religious thought. His best friends and associates were among the
-Unitarians, the Quakers, and others of liberal faith. His views on
-religion are finely expressed in a bit of correspondence published by
-Mr. Holland in his biography. In response to a cordial invitation to
-speak before the “Free Religious Association” in Boston, in 1874, he
-wrote:
-
- “I cannot be present at your Free Religious Convention in Boston. This
- is, of course, of smaller consequence to others than to myself, for I
- should come more to hear than to be heard. Freedom is a word of
- charming sound, not only to the tasked and tortured slaves, who toil
- for an earthly master, but for those who would break the galling
- chains of darkness and superstition. Regarding the Free Religious
- movement as one for light, love, and liberty, limited only by reason
- and human welfare, and opposed to those who convert life and death
- into enemies of human happiness, who people the invisible world with
- ghastly taskmasters, I give it hearty welcome. Only the truth can make
- men free, and I trust that your convention will be guided in all its
- utterances by its light and feel its power. I know many of its good
- men and women, who are likely to assemble with you, and I would gladly
- share with them the burden of reproach which their attacks upon
- popular error will be sure to bring upon them.”
-
-Extracts from letters to friends indicate still more clearly the deeper
-currents of his thought.
-
- “I once had a large stock of hope on hand, but like the sand in the
- glass, it has about run out. My present solace is in the cultivation
- of religious submission to the inevitable, in teaching myself that I
- am but a breath of the infinite, perhaps not so much. I was very sorry
- not to be able to attend the Free Religious Convention. I shall,
- hereafter, try to know more of these people.... I sometimes, at long
- intervals, try my old violin; but after all the music of the past and
- of imagination is sweeter than any my unpracticed and unskilled bow
- can produce. So I lay my dear old fiddle aside, and listen to the
- soft, silent, distant music of other days which, in the hush of my
- spirit, I still find lingering somewhere in the mysterious depths of
- my soul.”
-
- “I do not know that I am an evolutionist, but to this extent, I am
- one. I certainly have more patience with those who trace mankind
- upward from a low condition, even from the lower animals, than with
- those who start him at a point of perfection and conduct him to a
- level with the brutes. I have no sympathy with a theory that starts
- man in Heaven, and stops him in Hell.... An irrepressible conflict,
- grander than that described by the late William H. Seward, is
- perpetually going on. Two hostile and irreconcilable tendencies, broad
- as the world of man, are in the open field; good and evil, truth and
- error, enlightenment and superstition.”
-
-One of the stirring incidents of this post-slavery period was the
-“exodus movement.” In the summer of 1879, great numbers of Negroes, as
-if by concerted action, began to emigrate from the South and the
-southwestern states toward the North and West. This movement was the
-first manifestation of discontent ever made by the colored people on a
-large scale. It was in no way due to politics, but was rather an effort
-to free themselves from the conditions under which they were compelled
-to work and live. Their economic state was bad, and there seemed to be
-little hope of improvement. The exodus grew to such an extent that it
-produced something like national alarm and there were grave
-apprehensions that much suffering would attend the efforts of the
-Negroes to escape from poverty and dependence. Mr. Douglass has given
-the following reasons for the dissatisfaction:
-
-“Work as hard, faithfully, and constantly as they may, live as plainly
-and as sparingly as they may, they are no better off at the end of the
-year than at the beginning. They say that they are the dupes and victims
-of cunning and fraud in signing contracts which they cannot read and
-cannot fully understand; that they are compelled to trade at stores
-owned in whole or in part, by their employers; and that they are paid
-with orders and not with money. They say that they have to pay double
-the value of nearly everything they buy; that they are compelled to pay
-a rental of ten dollars a year for an acre of ground that will not bring
-thirty dollars under the hammer; that land-owners are in league to
-prevent land owning by Negroes; that when they work the land on shares,
-they barely make a living; that outside the towns and cities no
-provision is made for education, and, ground down as they are, they
-cannot themselves employ teachers to instruct their children.”
-
-As a general rule, the colored people in the North looked upon the
-exodus hopefully. To them it was a sign of courage on the part of their
-Southern brethren, and a protest against bad treatment. Frederick
-Douglass, however, who was always expected to have an opinion and
-express it, deplored the “unintelligent and somewhat aimless running
-away from the ills they have to others they know not of.” He could see
-no salvation for the Negro in the Northern states. “For him, as a
-Southern laborer,” he said, “there is no competition or substitute,” and
-he insisted that the freedman is always to be “the arbiter” of Southern
-“destiny.” He held that the best place for the Negro to work out his
-salvation was at home. His arguments are condensed in the following
-extracts from his published views:
-
- “It may well enough be said that the Negro question is not so
- desperate as the advocates of this exodus would have the public
- believe; that there is still hope that the Negro will ultimately have
- his rights as a man, and be fully protected in the South; that in
- several of the old slave-states his citizenship and his right to vote
- are already respected and protected; that the same, in time, will be
- secured by the Negro in other states.... The Fourteenth Amendment
- makes him a citizen, and the Fifteenth Amendment makes him a voter.
- With power behind him, at work for him, and which cannot be taken from
- him, the Negro, at the South may wisely bide his time.
-
- “As an assertion of power hitherto held in bitter contempt; as an
- emphatic and stinging protest against high-handed, greedy, and
- shameless injustice to the weak and defenseless; as a means of opening
- the blind eyes of oppressors to their folly and peril, the exodus has
- done valuable service. Whether it has accomplished all of which it is
- capable in this particular direction for the present, is a question
- which may well be considered. With a moderate degree of intelligent
- leadership among the laboring classes at the South, properly handling
- the justice of their cause, and wisely using the exodus example, they
- can easily exact better terms for their labor than ever before. Exodus
- is medicine, not food; it is for disease, not health; it is not to be
- taken from choice, but necessity. In anything like a normal condition
- of things, the South is the best place for the Negro. Nowhere else is
- there for him a promise of a happier future.
-
- “Let him stay there if he can, and save both the South and himself to
- civilization. The American people are bound, if they are or can be
- bound to anything, to keep the north gate of the South open to black
- and white and to all people. The time to assert a right, Webster says,
- is when it is called into question. If it is attempted by force or
- fraud, to compel the colored people to stay, then they should by all
- means go; go quickly and die if need be in the attempt. Thus far and
- to this extent any man may be an ‘emigrationist.’ In no case must the
- Negro be bottled up or caged up. He must be left free like any other
- American citizen, to choose his own habitation, and to go where he
- shall like. Though it may not be for his interest to leave the South,
- his right and power to leave it may be his best means of making it
- possible for him to stay there in peace. Woe to the oppressed and
- destitute of all countries and races, if the rich and powerful are to
- decide when and where they shall go or stay.”
-
-These sentiments of Mr. Douglass are interesting, not only as having a
-bearing on a question still vital to the South, but also as showing the
-orator’s secret affection for the land of his birth and early struggles.
-In spite of his fifty years of life and triumphs in the North, he was
-still a Southerner in spirit and in his primary attachments. His
-imagination and memory still traveled back to the associations that
-contained more of bitterness than joy,—yet some joy. There seemed to be
-in the depths of his soul a living sympathy for those who were enslaved
-with himself, and who were still wearing the scars of servitude. The
-land that was worked by the toil and sweat of generation after
-generation of his people, and the land in which they were still laboring
-and hoping on, he loved in spite of himself. He believed in the race in
-spite of its apparent helplessness, and he believed in the South in
-spite of all that he had suffered. It pained him to see his people flee
-from the land of their birth, of their sorrows, but also the land of
-their better destiny. He would not have them abandon what would some day
-be theirs if they could but endure, and work, and wait.
-
-With this sort of attachment to the South, it is not strange that, even
-after fifty years of complete separation, he still cherished the hope
-and eagerly welcomed an opportunity when it was offered him, to return
-to Talbot County, Md., his birthplace.
-
-The time of his visit to the land upon which he had formerly been held
-as a slave, was happily chosen so as to heighten the contrast between
-the past and present, for he was now United States Marshal of the
-District of Columbia. It required a vivid imagination to see anything in
-common between the barefooted, half-naked, half-starved, and penniless
-slave boy of fifty years ago and the stately-mannered gentleman and high
-government official of this day.
-
-The man whose misfortune it was at that time to have been Douglass’s
-master, lay on a bed of sickness with little hope of recovery. Thomas
-Auld had passed the allotted three score years and ten. When he learned
-that Marshal Douglass was actually on his ground as a visitor, he at
-once sent for him. The name of Thomas Auld was made noted all over the
-land wherever Douglass had spoken concerning slavery and slave-holders,
-and because of this he had for several years harbored a strong
-resentment against his one-time runaway slave. Now all was wonderfully
-changed, and each was in a mood to make amends for the wrongs he was
-impelled to commit against the other. Mr. Douglass feelingly says:
-
-“Had I been asked, in the days of slavery to visit this man ... it would
-have been an invitation to the auction block; now he was to me no longer
-a slave-holder, either in fact or spirit, and I regarded him as I did
-myself, as a victim of circumstances of birth and education, law and
-custom. Our courses had been determined for us and not by us. We had
-both been flung by powers that did not ask our consent, upon a mighty
-current of life which we could neither resist nor control.... Now as our
-lives were verging toward a point where differences disappear, even the
-constancy of hate breaks down and the clouds of pride, passion and
-selfishness vanish before the brightness of infinite light.”
-
-The meeting between the ex-master and ex-slave was impressive and
-beautiful. They were both so overcome with emotion for some moments that
-neither could speak. Tears dimmed their eyes and the silence was more
-eloquent than words. As soon as he regained his power of speech, Mr.
-Douglass, with that instinctive politeness which was characteristic of
-him, made apology to his former master for the many harsh accusations
-uttered in the days of slavery, when passion was in the ascendency. The
-old master was equally frank and said: “I always thought, though, that
-you were too smart to be a slave, and had I been in your place, I should
-have done as you did.”
-
-“Captain Auld,” replied Douglass, “I did not run away from you, but from
-slavery. It was not that I loved Cæsar less, but Rome more.”
-
-With this exchange of apologies and expressions of mutual good-will, the
-visit came to an end. If Mr. Douglass had any lingering bitterness in
-his soul, on account of the past, this face-to-face meeting, after so
-many years and so many changes, had now forever removed it. The laws and
-customs that so often made it impossible for good men, standing in the
-intimate relation of master and slave, to understand and respect each
-other, no longer existed.
-
-Shortly after this interview Mr. Auld passed away, and the fact that the
-Marshal of the District of Columbia had once been the property of the
-dead man became a matter of wide comment.
-
-Two years later, Mr. Douglass was again a visitor to Talbot County. He
-now went on the private yacht of John L. Thomas, United States Collector
-of Customs at the port of Baltimore. This time he returned to the scenes
-of his early life on the Lloyd plantation. It will be remembered that it
-was here the boy was separated from his grandmother, and left the only
-home he ever had before he became free. His master, Captain Anthony,
-lived on the Lloyd estate. It was at this place, too, that he was cuffed
-and half-starved by the hated Aunt Katy, and saw his own loving mother
-for the last time. Standing amid the scenes of his childhood miseries,
-looking in vain for faces that he once saw or knew in the long ago, he
-embodied in himself, perhaps, more changes than have been experienced in
-the life of any other American.
-
-Colonel Lloyd was away at the time, but every one on the estate was made
-aware of the visit of Marshal Douglass. The place was rich in traditions
-concerning this strange visitor, who had come out of a strange past, an
-era known to but few now living, and he was treated with marked
-deference by all.
-
-He also visited Easton, which will be remembered as the county-seat of
-Talbot County, where young Douglass, with his companions, was locked up
-in jail on the charge of conspiracy to escape from slavery. The old
-sheriff, who had placed him behind prison-bars, was still living, and
-said that he was proud to shake hands across the chasm of nearly fifty
-years. White and black crowded into the little court-house and listened
-with profound interest to the address he was asked to deliver. The young
-people, who belonged to the new era of freedom, wondered at his
-eloquence, and the older ones heard with confused and bewildering
-emotions.
-
-There seemed to be more of romance than reality, more of apparition than
-of real substance, in this man, for whom, at one time, the jail, and not
-the court-house, would have been regarded as a more fitting place.
-
-In the same year Frederick Douglass had another opportunity to revive
-the memories of the days preceding the war. He was asked to deliver an
-address on John Brown at Harper’s Ferry. He gladly accepted the
-invitation, and spoke to an immense concourse of Virginians, white and
-black, on the very spot where, less than twenty years before, he would,
-very possibly, have been tried and hanged on the charge of high treason,
-had he not escaped those who made efforts to arrest him. On the platform
-close beside him sat the man who was the attorney for the commonwealth
-of Virginia in the prosecution of Brown. Douglass spoke with boldness in
-his eulogy of the old raider, and what he said was heartily cheered.
-
-In 1859 Douglass had fled to England as a fugitive from justice because
-of his presumed complicity in what was then called John Brown’s “crime.”
-In less than twenty years he was honored by many of the same people who
-had then hated his name and thirsted for his blood. He could rightly
-claim to be a part both of the cause and the effect of this remarkable
-revolution of public opinion. The possibilities of American life were,
-perhaps, never better illustrated than in his person.
-
-In the fall of 1886, Mr. Douglass, accompanied by his wife, made an
-extensive tour of Europe and Egypt. He revisited some of the cities in
-Italy, and crossed the Mediterranean to the land of the Pharaohs. He has
-written most delightfully of his travels in his _Life and Times_.
-Everything of historical value in Europe meant a great deal to him,
-because he was so earnest a student of men and events. Of Victor Hugo,
-he said, on seeing a memorial to him, that “he was a man whose heart was
-broad enough to take in the whole world and to rank among the greatest
-of the human race.”
-
-Upon returning to this country, he had many pleasing evidences that he
-was greatly missed in his absence, and that his opinions were as eagerly
-sought as ever on any question that came within the range of his
-interest.
-
-One of the first public addresses made by him after his return from
-abroad was in behalf of woman’s suffrage, in Washington, at a meeting of
-the International Council of Women. He spoke ardently of the progress of
-the human mind as evidenced by the unveiling of a statue to Galileo,
-which he had witnessed in Rome. He said:
-
-“Whatever revolutions may have in store for us, one thing is certain:
-the new revolution in human thought will never go backward. When a great
-truth once gets abroad in the world, no power on earth can imprison or
-proscribe its limits, or suppress it. It is bound to go on until it
-becomes the thought of the world. Such a truth is woman’s right to equal
-liberty with man. She was born with it, it was hers before she
-comprehended it. It is inscribed upon all powers and faculties of her
-soul, and no custom, law, or usage can ever destroy it. Now that it has
-got fairly fixed in the minds of the few, it is bound to become fixed in
-the minds of the many, and be supported at last by a great cloud of
-witnesses which no man can number and no power can withstand.”
-
-In the same year, addressing a suffrage association in Boston, he said:
-“If the whole is greater than a part; if the sense and sum of human
-goodness in man and woman combined are greater than that of either alone
-and separate, then this government that excludes women from all
-participation in its creation, administration, and perpetuation demeans
-itself.”
-
-In the matter of the education of his people, Mr. Douglass had a deep
-and abiding interest. It will be remembered that he believed in the
-broadest and best possible schooling of the masses. He regarded it as
-important to consider the Negro’s opportunity in planning for his
-education. Hence it was that, in addressing the students of Tuskegee in
-1892 on the subject of “Self-Made Men,” he laid special stress on the
-necessity of the learning of trades in connection with other training.
-Hence his saying that “the earth has no prejudice against color; crops
-yield as readily to the touch of the black man’s hand as to that of his
-white brother.”
-
-“Go on,” he continued; “I shall not be with you long; you have heights
-to ascend and breadths to fill such as I never could and never can. Go
-on. When you are working with your hands they grow larger; the same is
-true of your heads.... Seek to acquire knowledge as well as property,
-and in time you may have the honor of going to Congress. Congress ought
-to be able to stand a Negro, if the Negro can stand Congress.”
-
-In these addresses before students in college or trade-schools, he took
-pains to urge that the man with a trade, as well as the man with a
-profession should be respected and honored, according to the amount of
-character and intelligence he puts into his work. He insisted that there
-was no such thing as servility or degradation for one who made his way
-through the world with an honest heart and skilled hands.
-
-His earnestness in this conviction is further evidenced by one of his
-last acts in behalf of his people, when he helped to found the
-Industrial School at Manassas, Va.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI
- FINAL HONORS TO THE LIVING AND TRIBUTES TO THE DEAD
-
-
-The last public office held by Frederick Douglass was that of
-Commissioner for the Haytian Republic at the World’s Columbian
-Exposition in Chicago, in the summer of 1893. The government of Hayti
-erected an artistic pavilion on the Fair grounds, and here from May 1st
-to November 1st, he was stationed, dispensing the hospitalities demanded
-by his position and the occasion.
-
-Interesting as was the Haytian display, it did not attract as much
-public attention as did the Commissioner. No person or exhibit at the
-Exposition so illustrated and exemplified human progress as did
-Frederick Douglass. In him it was personified. Everywhere his presence
-excited interest and admiration. In his movements through the grounds he
-was ever a striking figure. His form, towering far above the average
-man, and his snow-white hair, hanging in waves about his massive head,
-commanded instant attention. People, young and old, crowded about him,
-wherever he went. But not all were curiosity seekers. Thousands knew Mr.
-Douglass personally, had heard him speak, or were familiar with his
-history. Parents brought their children, that they might shake hands
-with him. He was sometimes quite embarrassed by these manifestations of
-admiration and interest.
-
-The Exposition officials appreciated the importance of the man, as well
-as his position as the Haytian Commissioner. No honors were unshared by
-him on account of his race. Whenever the representative men of the
-civilized governments met in administrative councils, Frederick Douglass
-was an honored guest and participant. His old-time eloquence was aroused
-on many interesting occasions, and especially when the cause of the
-Negro needed a champion. An official of the Exposition was reported as
-saying that Frederick Douglass, more than any other orator there, voiced
-the sentiment of the brotherhood of man. While various representatives
-would extol the people of this or that government or nationality, this
-self-made and self-educated man of a belated race, was always insisting
-that the man himself, as God made him, was greater than any geographical
-or national label could possibly render him.
-
-He was constantly sought for addresses on all kinds of occasions, and he
-generously responded, whether the call came from some obscure religious
-organization, literary society, or one of the great international
-parliaments, convened in connection with the Exposition.
-
-There were two very notable addresses by him in the summer of 1893, that
-almost excel the best of his many great speeches. One of these was made
-on what was known as “Negro Day” at the Exposition in the month of
-August. The vast auditorium in Music Hall was filled by an audience that
-was more thoroughly international in the variety of races represented,
-than any other gathering assembled during the progress of the Fair. In
-voice, gesture, and spirit, he seemed like some great prophet, bearing a
-message to the civilized world. No one who listened to this masterful
-plea for justice for the Negro race, can ever forget the inspiration of
-that hour.
-
-The other speech was delivered before one of the parliaments on the
-subject of “good government.” There were present students of civil
-government, sociologists, judges of courts, representatives of the
-woman’s suffrage movement, like Susan B. Anthony, and others. Some
-striking addresses followed Douglass’s, but he had left the audience
-completely under his spell.
-
-With the closing of the Exposition in the autumn of 1893, ended the last
-chapter in his life as a public official. As office-holding, however,
-was by no means the most important part of his career, it did not
-require an office to keep him in view of the people. His prominence
-outlasted that of many of his contemporaries who were more favored than
-he in the matter of public service. He remained, up to the very last
-hour of his life, one of the few men of the nation of whom it never
-tired. This was so, largely because he was more a part of the present
-than of the past. Though he compassed in his life over a half-century of
-national history, he never got out of touch with current events,
-retaining to the end his influence on public opinion in all those
-matters in which he was peculiarly interested, and in regard to which
-his views had special authority.
-
-When he closed his official business with the World’s Fair, he yielded
-to a strong pressure from the people of the West for a limited course of
-lectures. The one thing which induced him to undertake this arduous
-task, after the months of exhausting duties at the Exposition, was the
-opportunity it would offer him to speak his word of protest and
-condemnation of the crime of lynching. Nothing in his long life of
-anxiety and struggle for his race so depressed him as did this new
-manifestation of contempt for his people. His first itinerary included
-Des Moines, Omaha, and other cities. He was cordially received
-everywhere and his denunciation of mob law made a deep impression. These
-addresses were in the nature of his last message and warning to the
-American people against the unchecked lawlessness that spent itself on
-those who were not strong enough to protect themselves.
-
-He returned to his restful and delightful home in Washington with some
-apparent fatigue, but no permanent harm in consequence of his long
-journey.
-
-The last two years of his life seem to have been more free from care and
-active duties than any previous period. He merited a rest and he had
-everything about him to contribute to his ease and enjoyment. Among the
-trees and flowers of his ample grounds on Cedar Hill, and surrounded by
-his books and the comforts of his classic home, life went on serenely
-and happily.
-
-One of the interesting sights here was the procession of people of all
-kinds making pilgrimages every day to the home of “the Sage of
-Anacostia,”[6] as he was fondly called by his friends and neighbors.
-Thousands of colored persons visited him to pay their respects to the
-man whose life had been consecrated to the cause of their emancipation
-and citizenship. To all he was kindly and considerate. His mind was as
-alert and keen as ever, and thoroughly alive to passing events. He had a
-special fondness for the young men of his race, and particularly those
-who were educated and progressive. It was always an inspiration to him
-to see the numbers of young colored men, who were fitting themselves by
-study and application to pass civil service examinations, and gain for
-themselves positions of importance in all departments of the government.
-He frequently invited them to his home to dine with him, and would
-discuss with them the possibilities for their advancement in all lines
-of endeavor. He was always hopeful regarding the progress of these young
-men in business and in the professions.
-
-Footnote 6:
-
- Anacostia is a suburb of Washington, and was Frederick Douglass’s home
- so long as he lived in the District of Columbia.
-
-He was generous, almost to a fault, with his time, money, and services
-in behalf of any cause that meant a step forward for his people. His
-health was uniformly good. Every day he was either riding or walking
-about the streets of Washington, or in conference with those who needed
-his advice and assistance in all kinds of helpful enterprises. He had a
-part in every civic event of any importance in the District of Columbia.
-No one colored man before or since his death has wielded so much
-influence in all directions. He had not only won the esteem of the
-people of Washington, but he knew how to deserve and retain it. In the
-District government, in the public schools, and at Howard University,
-his influence was felt and respected.
-
-What he himself was, he had gained by hard work, consecration, temperate
-habits, and God-fearing conduct toward all his fellows. His life and
-achievements spoke eloquently to the young men about him and pointed the
-way to progress. Mr. Douglass had richly earned everything that he had,
-and those who took him as a model were made to realize that success
-comes not as a gift, but must be deserved and won as a reward for right
-thinking and high living. Poor as were his people in all things,
-Frederick Douglass found enough to be proud of in them and urged
-continuously upon the younger generation the necessity of cultivating a
-spirit of race pride,—of setting before themselves and the race of which
-they were members clear and definite ideals.
-
-In nothing else was the life of Mr. Douglass so important as in the
-uplifting influence he exerted, directly and indirectly, upon the young
-men of his time. There were many good leaders worthy of emulation, but
-none who exercised the authority that he did over the opinions of the
-other members of his race. His life was an open book. Naturally there
-were those of his color who envied him; who sought to discredit his
-worth and work; who felt that so long as he lived and spoke, none other
-could be known or heard. The young men of force and intelligence,
-however, who had it in them to do something large and important looked
-up to and were inspired by the “old man eloquent” of the Negro race.
-
-It is easily possible to extend observations of this kind concerning the
-personality and influence of this great man during those restful years
-when he was happily free from care and public responsibilities. How
-little he thought of death! Sound of body and sane of mind, and always
-thinking and planning for what should come after, he lived as if there
-was no claim upon his future existence which he could not adjust. When
-death did come on the second day of February, 1895, it found him with no
-preparation, in the ordinary sense, for its message. And yet it had
-always been his expressed wish that he should go as he did—“to fall as
-the leaf in the autumn of life.”
-
-On that day he had been attending the Council of Women which was meeting
-in Metzerott’s Hall in the city of Washington, and was much interested
-in the proceedings. He was an honorary member of that body. They were in
-quest of larger liberties for themselves, as he so long had been for
-himself and his people. When Frederick Douglass appeared at the
-convention in the morning, he was greeted with applause and escorted to
-the platform by a committee. He remained there nearly the entire day.
-When he returned to his home on Cedar Hill for dinner, he was in the
-best of spirits, and with a great deal of animation and pleasure,
-discussed with Mrs. Douglass the incidents of the meeting.
-
-After the meal he prepared himself to deliver an address in a colored
-Baptist church near by. His carriage was at the door. While passing
-through the hall from the dining-room, he seemed to drop slowly upon his
-knees, but in such a way that the movement did not excite any alarm in
-his wife. His face wore a look of surprise as he exclaimed, “Why, what
-does this mean?” Then, straightening his body upon the floor, he was
-gone. The men who responded to Mrs. Douglass’s agonized cries for help,
-came hurriedly with physicians, but it was too late. Douglass was
-dead—without pain, without warning, without fear, and at a time when
-life was sweet, full, and complete. His last moment of enthusiasm, like
-his first hours of aspiration when a slave-child, was for liberty; if
-not for himself, then for some one else.
-
-The announcement that Frederick Douglass was dead came like a shock to
-every one, especially to those who had seen him about the city during
-the day, full of animation and apparent physical vigor. The sad news
-spread rapidly and produced a profound sense of bereavement among all
-classes of people.
-
-The scene at the Women’s Council, where he had been during the day an
-honored guest, was an affecting one. The president, Mrs. May Wright
-Sewall, in attempting to voice the sentiment of the members, said:
-
- “A report, as unwelcome as sad and solemn, has come to us of the
- sudden and most unexpected death of Frederick Douglass. The news
- cannot be received in silence by the Council. That historic figure
- which individually and intellectually was the symbol of the wonderful
- transition through which this generation has lived has been with us in
- our Council during both of our sessions to-day. When he arrived, an
- escort was directed to conduct him to the platform. We felt that this
- platform was honored by his presence. I am sure there was no divided
- sentiment on this subject, although we have here women whose families
- are related to all political parties of our country, and connected by
- ancestry with both sides of the great question. It is surely to be
- regarded as a historic coincidence that this man, who embodied a
- century of struggle between freedom and oppression, spent his last
- hours a witness of the united efforts of those who have come from so
- many different places and along such various avenues to formulate some
- plan for a new expression of freedom in the relation of woman to the
- world, society, and the state.”
-
-The mortuary arrangements at Washington were on the scale and of the
-dignity of a state funeral. Throngs of people lined the streets through
-which the _cortège_ passed to the Metropolitan Church where the
-ceremonies were held. Delegations of prominent colored men and women,
-from almost every part of the Union, came to pay their last respects to
-the dead statesman.
-
-Within the spacious church, the scene was such as perhaps had never
-before been witnessed in this country. All colors and nationalities were
-present, moved by a common sorrow. Men like Senators Hoar and Sherman;
-members of the Supreme Court like Justice Harlan; members of the House
-of Representatives, officials of the District of Columbia, members of
-the National Council of Women, the faculty of Howard University, several
-Bishops of the African Methodist Episcopal Church, and other
-distinguished men and women were present and gave to the sad occasion
-the character of a national bereavement.
-
-Floral tributes in profusion were sent by organizations of all kinds as
-well as by individuals. There were two that had special significance;
-the one sent by the Haytian government, and the other by Colonel B. F.
-Auld of Baltimore, the son of Frederick Douglass’s former owner. Fervent
-words of appreciation were spoken by Dr. J. T. Jenifer, pastor of the
-Metropolitan Church, Rev. F. J. Grimké, Susan B. Anthony, Mrs. May
-Wright Sewall, John S. Durham, Bishop W. B. Derrick, and M. J. N.
-Nichols, representing Hayti. The city of Washington, where Mr. Douglass
-lived so long and was so much esteemed, paid every possible tribute of
-respect to his memory in these impressive ceremonies.
-
-While the fallen Douglass was thus being honored at the national
-capital, the city of Rochester was sorrow-stricken at the loss of its
-“foremost citizen” and at once set about making “suitable arrangements
-to give his remains according to the desire he so often expressed,—a
-resting-place in beautiful Mount Hope, the city of the dead.” Rochester
-always claimed Frederick Douglass as her son by right of adoption, and
-that at a time when many other Northern cities would not have tolerated
-his presence. By order of the mayor, a special meeting of the city
-council was convened “for the purpose of taking such action as might be
-necessary and appropriate in connection with the funeral of Hon.
-Frederick Douglass, for many years a respected and beloved citizen of
-this city.”
-
-At the meeting thus called, a memorial, couched in terms at once
-touching and flattering, was read and spread upon the records. The
-council also passed a resolution that the members attend the funeral in
-a body, and it was arranged that the remains should lie in state in the
-city hall, and that on the day of the funeral the public schools be
-closed, so as to give the pupils an opportunity to view the face of a
-man whose life and character were worthy of their remembrance and
-emulation.
-
-Thus all the proceedings partook of a civic nature and were impressive
-beyond anything ever witnessed in honor of a Negro citizen. The services
-in Rochester were held in the Central Presbyterian Church. The Douglass
-League acted as a guard of honor in conducting the remains to the city
-hall and to the church. Rev. W. C. Gannett, of the Unitarian Church,
-delivered the funeral oration. No other in the United States was better
-qualified by natural disposition and breadth of mind to give adequate
-estimate of Douglass as a man. The portion of the address here quoted
-will afford some notion of the character of the eulogies uttered in all
-parts of this country and in England in recognition of the worth of
-Frederick Douglass and his work. Mr. Gannett said in part:
-
- “This is an impressive moment in our city history. There was a man who
- lived in one of its humbler homes, whose name barred him from the
- doors of the wealthiest mansions of our city. This man has come home
- to a little circle of his best beloved ones. He has come, as it were,
- alone, and our city has gone forth to meet him at its gates. He has
- been welcomed for once in the most impressive way. His remains have
- laid in our city hall. Our school children have looked upon his face,
- that they may in the future tell their children that they have looked
- on the face of Frederick Douglass. What a difference! What a contrast!
- What does it all mean? It means two things. It is a personal tribute
- and it is an impersonal tribute. It is a personal tribute to the man
- who has exemplified before the eyes of all America the inspiring
- example of a man who made himself. America is the land of
- opportunities. But not all men in this land can use their
- opportunities. Here was a man who used to the uttermost all the
- opportunities that America held forth to him, and when opportunities
- were not at hand he made them. Nature gave him birth, nature deprived
- him of father and almost mother. He was born seventy-eight years ago,
- forty years before anti-slavery was heard of as a watchword.
-
- “He is not simply a self-made man, although he was one of the
- greatest. A man self-made but large-hearted. Who ever had better
- opportunity to be a greater-hearted man than Frederick Douglass? Think
- of the results for which he labored almost to the end of his life.
- Notwithstanding that the lash had been lifted from his back, still he
- encountered shrugs of the shoulders, lifting of the eyebrows, and an
- edging away of his fellow-men when he approached them, always under
- that opportunity of insult.
-
- “But that was not all. It is not a simple tribute to the man. The
- personal tribute rises and loses itself in a grander and nobler
- thought. It becomes transfigured into an impersonal thought. We are in
- an era of change on a great subject. White people are here honoring a
- black people. An exception? Yes. Great men are always exceptions. An
- exception? Yes, but an instance as well, an example of how the world’s
- feeling is changing. I like to think over our 140,000 people of
- Rochester and pick out the two or three who will be called our first
- citizens twenty or thirty years hence. Very few in Rochester are
- famous through the North, very few are famous throughout the world.
- Yet the papers of two continents had editorials about the man whose
- remains lie before us. We have but one bronze monument in our streets.
- Will the next be that of Frederick Douglass, the black man, the
- ex-slave, the renowned orator, the distinguished American citizen? I
- think it will be. In and around our soldiers’ monument we group the
- history of the war. It is not only the monument of Lincoln, although
- Lincoln’s figure is represented there. It is the monument of the war.
-
- “The nation to-day, thank God, is not only celebrating the
- emancipation of slavery, but also its emancipation from the slavery of
- prejudice and from the slavery of caste and color.
-
- “Let me end with one word. There are but six words in the sentence,
- and it is one of the great sentences worthy to be painted on the
- church walls and worthy to be included in such a book as the Bible. It
- is his word. It is: ‘One with God is a majority.’”
-
-The vast audience that listened to these words of praise sadly followed
-Douglass’s remains to their resting-place in Mount Hope Cemetery, beside
-the graves of his little daughter Anna, and his beloved wife, the mother
-of his children. Few great citizens of the state of New York were ever
-more signally honored than was he in these last funeral rites by the
-citizens of Rochester. And this was not all. The suggestion of a
-monument by Mr. Gannett in his funeral address found quick and hearty
-response from the people of the city in an effort led by John W.
-Thompson without regard to race or color. Not only in that place, but
-throughout the country, the idea of erecting a bronze statue of
-Douglass, at his home, was taken up and acted upon. Generous
-contributions began to pour in from every direction. The great state of
-New York, that had honored him in so many ways during his lifetime,
-appropriated out of the public treasury, the sum of $3,000 for this
-purpose.
-
-The whole amount was soon raised. The ceremonies attending the unveiling
-of the monument partook of the character of a state event. Special
-excursions brought multitudes of people from all parts of New York. The
-Governor, Theodore Roosevelt, and many other state officials, were in
-attendance. His address, so impressively delivered, was the climax of
-the splendid ceremonies. His tribute to the great Negro was inspired by
-a sympathetic appreciation of the man and a profound sense of the
-significance of his life. He reminded the vast concourse of people that
-the lesson taught by the colored statesman was “the lesson of truth, of
-honesty, of fearless courage, of striving for the right; the lesson of
-distinguished and fearless performance of civic duty.” The bronze figure
-of the great Negro stands in a conspicuous site in the heart of
-Rochester, and is as much a monument to the generous spirit of its
-citizens, as to the worth and achievements of him whose career it
-commemorates.
-
-Douglass lived long enough to see the triumph of the cause for which he
-had dreamed, hoped, and labored. But he had lived long enough, also, to
-realize that what slavery had been two hundred years and more in doing
-could not be wholly undone in thirty or forty years; could, in fact,
-hardly be wholly undone since the Future is always built out of the
-materials of the Past.
-
-In his later years he came to understand that the problem, on the work
-of solving which he and others had entered with such high hopes in the
-Reconstruction period, was larger and more complicated than it at that
-time seemed. If the realization of this fact was a disappointment to
-him, it did not cause him to lose courage. His faith in the future
-remained unshaken. He was sane and sanguine to the end. Least of all did
-he allow himself to feel aggrieved or become embittered by any personal
-inconvenience that he encountered because of the color of his skin. At
-the conclusion of his Autobiography he says:
-
-“It may possibly be inferred from what I have said of the prevalence of
-prejudice, and the practice of proscription, that I have had a very
-miserable sort of life, or that I must be remarkably insensible to
-public aversion. Neither inference is true. I have neither been
-miserable because of the ill-feeling of those about me, nor indifferent
-to popular approval; and I think, upon the whole, I have passed a
-tolerably cheerful and even joyful life. I have never felt myself
-isolated since I entered the field to plead the cause of the slave, and
-demand equal rights for all. In every town and city where it has been my
-lot to speak, there have been raised up for me friends of both colors to
-cheer and strengthen me in my work. I have always felt, too, that I had
-on my side all the invisible forces of the moral government of the
-universe.”
-
-Frederick Douglass’s life fell in the period of war, of controversy, and
-of fierce party strife. The task which was assigned to him was, on the
-whole, one of destruction and liberation, rather than construction and
-reconciliation. Circumstances and his own temperament made him the
-aggressive champion of his people, and of all others to whom custom or
-law denied the privileges which he had learned to regard as the
-inalienable possessions of men. He was for liberty, at all times, and in
-all shapes. Seeking the ballot for the Negro, he was ardently in favor
-of granting the same privilege to woman. Holding, as he did, that there
-were certain rights and dignities that belong to man as man, he was
-opposed to discrimination in our immigration laws in favor of the white
-races of Europe and against the yellow races of Asia. In religion, also,
-he was disposed to unite himself with the extreme liberal movement. In
-all this he was at once an American, and a man of his time.
-
-But Mr. Douglass was not merely an American, sharing the convictions and
-aspirations of the most progressive men of his day. He was also a Negro,
-and the lesson of his life is addressed in the most particular way to
-the members of his own race: “To those who have suffered in slavery, I
-can say, I, too, have suffered. To those who have taken some risks and
-encountered hardships in the flight from bondage, I can say, I, too,
-have endured and risked. To those who have battled for liberty,
-brotherhood, and citizenship, I can say, I, too, have battled. And to
-those who have lived to enjoy the fruits of liberty I can say, I, too,
-live and rejoice. If I have pushed my example too far, I beg them to
-remember that I have written in part for the encouragement of a class
-whose aspirations need the stimulus of success.”
-
-And then he ends: “I have aimed to assure them that knowledge may be
-obtained under difficulties; that poverty may give place to competency;
-that obscurity is not an absolute bar to distinction; and that a way is
-open to welfare and happiness to all who will resolutely and wisely
-pursue that way; that neither slavery, stripes, imprisonment, nor
-proscription need extinguish self-respect, crush manly ambition, or
-paralyze effort; that no power outside of himself can prevent a man from
-sustaining an honorable character and a useful relation to his day and
-generation; that neither institutions nor friends can make a race to
-stand unless it has strength in its own legs; that there is no power in
-the world which can be relied on to help the weak against the strong, or
-the simple against the wise; that races, like individuals, must stand or
-fall by their own merits.”
-
-As has been already indicated in the course of this narrative, Frederick
-Douglass never formulated any definite religious creed. But no one who
-reads the story of his life and work can doubt that he was guided and
-inspired through his whole career by the highest moral and religious
-motives. The evidence of this is not merely his steadfast optimism and
-faith in the future, but in the sense in which he regarded his personal
-mission. From his own point of view, the work he did for his race was
-not merely a duty, it was a high privilege:
-
-“Forty years of my life have been given to the cause of my people, and
-if I had forty years more they should all be sacredly given to the same
-great cause. If I have done something for that cause, I am, after all,
-more a debtor to it than it is a debtor to me.”
-
-
-
-
- BIBLIOGRAPHY
-
-
- DOUGLASS, FREDERICK. Narrative of Frederick Douglass, 1845.
-
- —— My Bondage and My Freedom, 1855.
-
- —— My Escape from Slavery. _Century Magazine_, November, 1881.
-
- —— Life and Times of Frederick Douglass, 1882.
-
- HOLLAND, FREDERICK MAY. Frederick Douglass, the Colored Orator, 1891.
-
- GARRISON, WILLIAM LLOYD. Frederick Douglass as Orator and Reformer,
- _Our Day_, August, 1894.
-
- MAY, SAMUEL J. Recollections of the Anti-Slavery Conflict, 1869.
-
- JOHNSON, OLIVER. William Lloyd Garrison and His Times, 1881.
-
- AUSTIN, GEORGE LOWELL. The Life and Times of Wendell Phillips, 1899.
-
- LIFE AND TIMES OF WILLIAM LLOYD GARRISON. By his children, 1889.
-
- SIEBERT, WILLIAM H. The Underground Railroad, 1898.
-
- REPORTS of the Anti-Slavery Society.
-
- GOODELL, W. Slavery and Anti-Slavery, A History of the Struggle in
- Both Hemispheres; with a View of the Slavery Question in the
- United States, third edition, 1855.
-
- STILL, WILLIAM. The Underground Railroad, 1872.
-
- —— Underground Railway Records, New and revised edition with life of
- author, 1883.
-
- GREELEY, HORACE. The American Conflict: Its Causes, Incidents, and
- Results, 1864–6.
-
- WILSON, JOSEPH T. The Black Phalanx; a History of the Negro Soldiers
- of the United States in the Wars of 1775, 1812, and
- 1861–1865; 1888.
-
- NICOLAY, JOHN G. AND HAY, JOHN. Abraham Lincoln; a History, 1890.
-
- RHODES, JAMES FORD. History of the United States from the Compromise
- of 1850, 1893.
-
- WILLIAMS, G. W. Negro Troops in the Rebellion, 1888.
-
-
-
-
- INDEX
-
-
- Abolition circulars, held up by Southern postmasters, 88.
-
- Abolition, sweet singers of, 100.
-
- Abolitionists, resent attitude of government to slavery, 219.
-
- “Anacostia, the Sage of,” 338.
-
- Andrew, John A., Governor of Massachusetts, enlists Negro regiments,
- 222.
-
- Anthony, Asa, friend of Douglass, 138.
-
- Anthony, H. B., favors policy of conciliation toward South, 213.
-
- Anthony, Lucretia, 19;
- her kindness to Douglass, 23.
-
- Anthony, Susan B., address at Douglass’s funeral, 343.
-
- Anti-Slavery conventions, 70, 78, 96.
-
- Anti-Slavery societies;
- Massachusetts Society employs Douglass as agent, 72;
- New England society organized, 96;
- New York society organized, 96;
- National society formed, 96;
- British and Foreign, presents Douglass with Bible, 102.
-
- _Anti-Slavery Standard, The_, anti-slavery newspaper, 124.
-
- Antoine, C. C., Lieutenant-Governor of Louisiana, 279.
-
- “Aunt Katy,” cruelty of, 19.
-
- Auld, Colonel B. F., sends floral tribute, Douglass’s funeral, 343.
-
- Auld, Hugh, apprentices Douglass to a ship-calker, 51;
- sells Douglass his own time, 55;
- sells Douglass into freedom, 113.
-
- Auld, Mrs. Sophia, teaches Douglass to read, 24.
-
- Auld, Thomas, 35;
- his fondness for Douglass, 49;
- sells Douglass, 113.
-
-
- Bailey, Frederick Augustus Washington, 16.
-
- Bailey, “Grandmother,” character and influence of, 17.
-
- Barrier, Anthony, agent for the Underground Railway, 161.
-
- Bearman, Amos G., assists Douglass at Buffalo anti-slavery meeting, 80.
-
- Bible societies, effect upon anti-slavery agitation, 91.
-
- Birney, James G., Abolitionist, printing press destroyed by mob at
- Cincinnati, 89.
-
- Blackall, B. F., Douglass’s telegram to, 192.
-
- “Black Laws,” in Illinois, 142.
-
- Bliss, William C., friend of Douglass, 138.
-
- Breckinridge, John C., leader Southern Wing of the Democracy, 201.
-
- Bright, John, Douglass guest of, 115.
-
- Brougham, Lord, Douglass meets, 101.
-
- Brown, Box, fugitive slave, 163.
-
- Brown, John, 182;
- at Chambersburg, 189;
- effect of execution on anti-slavery movement, 197.
-
- Brown, John M., representative Negro, one of delegation to President
- Johnson, 260.
-
- Brown, William Wells, at Boston celebration Emancipation Proclamation,
- 239.
-
- Browne, Hugh M., head of “Institute for Colored Youth,” 152.
-
- Bruce, Blanche K., United States Senator from Mississippi, 279.
-
- Buffum, James N., accompanies Douglass to England, 100;
- in Scotland, 104.
-
- Bullock, Judge, favors colonization, 146.
-
- Burns, Anthony, fugitive slave, 169.
-
- Burnside, General A. E., issues proclamation to Southern people, 218.
-
- Butler, General Benjamin F., declares fugitive slaves “contraband,”
- 222;
- at National Loyalists’ Convention, 268.
-
-
- Canada, end of the Underground Railway, 160.
-
- Carey, Mary Ann Shadd, Negro educator, 153.
-
- Cedar Hill, Douglass’s home, 337.
-
- Chambersburg, Pa., place of last meeting of Douglass and John Brown,
- 189.
-
- Chase, Salmon P., contributes to support of _North Star_, 125;
- encourages Douglass to visit President Lincoln, 228.
-
- Christiana, Pa., bloody resistance of slave-catchers at, 171.
-
- Churches, colored, 149.
-
- Civil War, causes of, 217.
-
- Clark, Peter H., efforts to establish ante-bellum Negro education, 151.
-
- Clarkson, Thomas, Douglass’s meeting with, 102.
-
- Clay, Henry, member of the Colonization Society, 146;
- favors Fugitive Slave Law, 166.
-
- Cobden, Richard, Douglass meets, 101.
-
- Collins, John A., general agent of Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society,
- 72;
- associated with Douglass in the “one hundred anti-slavery
- conventions,” 79.
-
- Colonization Society, American, objects of, 145.
-
- Combe, George, Douglass entertained by, 102.
-
- Constitution of the United States, a “pro-slavery instrument,” 127.
-
- Cook, John F., efforts to establish ante-bellum Negro education, 151;
- representative Negro, one of delegation to President Johnson, 260.
-
- Coppin, Fannie Jackson, efforts for ante-bellum Negro education, 151.
-
- Coppin, Thomas, efforts for ante-bellum Negro education, 151.
-
- Covey, Edward, the “negro breaker,” 38.
-
- Cox, A. L., delegate National Anti-Slavery Society, 96.
-
- Crafts, William, fugitive slave, 163.
-
- Crandall, Prudence, Abolitionist, imprisoned for teaching colored
- children, 88, 141.
-
- Crandall, Doctor Reuben, Abolitionist, imprisoned for circulating
- Anti-slavery literature, 88.
-
- Crofts, Mrs. Julia Griffith, takes business management of _North Star_,
- 125.
-
-
- Dallas, George M., Minister to England, refuses Douglass passport, 194.
-
- Dana, Charles A., Assistant Secretary of War, encourages Douglass to
- visit President Lincoln, 228.
-
- Davis, Alexander, Lieutenant-Governor of Mississippi, 279.
-
- Davis, Richard A., aids in rescue of Anthony Burns, fugitive slave,
- 169.
-
- Day, J. Howard, colored anti-slavery orator, 155.
-
- Delaney, Martin R., colored anti-slavery orator, 155.
-
- Derrick, Bishop W. B., address at Douglass’s funeral, 343.
-
- Dickinson, Anna, at Boston celebration of Emancipation Proclamation,
- 239.
-
- Discrimination against Negroes at public lectures done away with, 66.
-
- Disraeli, Benjamin, Douglass meets, 101.
-
- Dix, General John A., proclamation to Southern people, 218.
-
- Dorr, Thomas W., leader of pro-slavery forces in Rhode Island contest
- over new constitution, 76.
-
- Dorsey, Thomas L., agent for the Underground Railway, 161.
-
- Douglass, Charles R., son of Frederick, enlists in army, 223.
-
- Douglass, Frederick, born at Tuckahoe, 15;
- transferred to the Lloyd plantation, 19;
- starved by “Aunt Katy,” 20;
- sees his mother for the last time, 20;
- sees a slave killed by an overseer, 23;
- goes to Baltimore to live, 24;
- is taught to read, 24;
- gains possession of a speller, 26;
- buys a copy of the _Columbian Orator_, 26;
- learns to write, 27;
- thoughts turned to religion, 28;
- sent back to the plantation, 31;
- justifies pilfering by slaves, 34;
- Sunday-school broken up, 36;
- sent to a negro breaker, 37;
- starts a second Sunday-school, 42;
- plans to escape, 44;
- plot discovered, 48;
- sent back to Baltimore, 50;
- apprenticed as a shipcalker, 51;
- buys his own time, 56;
- makes his escape from Baltimore, 58;
- marries in New York, 62;
- seeks refuge in New Bedford, Mass., 63;
- changes his name, 63;
- denied opportunity to work at his trade, 65;
- attends anti-slavery convention at Nantucket, 70;
- invited to become a speaker for the anti-slavery cause, 72;
- takes part in political contest in Rhode Island, 76;
- speaks on the common at Grafton, Mass., 78;
- takes part in the “one hundred anti-slavery conventions,” 78;
- addresses 5,000 people at Buffalo, N. Y., 80;
- is mobbed at Richmond, Ind., 81;
- publishes “Narrative,” 99;
- sails for Europe, 100;
- is refused cabin passage on the steamer _Cambria_, 100;
- meets Thomas Clarkson, English Abolitionist, 102;
- makes a tour through Ireland, 102;
- presented with a Bible by the British and Foreign Anti-Slavery
- Society, 102;
- takes part in the anti-slavery agitation in Scotland, 103;
- addresses the World’s Temperance Convention at Covent Garden, 106;
- speaks at the Peace Convention in London, 110;
- freedom purchased, 112;
- receives a gift of $2,500 to found an anti-slavery journal, 114;
- returns from England to America, 116;
- attacked by newspapers, 117;
- presides at colored convention in Cleveland, 118;
- reasons for founding an independent newspaper, 120;
- removes to Rochester, N. Y., 124;
- publishes the _North Star_, 125;
- parts company with the Garrisonians, 128;
- grounds for change of views, 129;
- tribute to the anti-slavery society, 132;
- personal relations with Garrison, 133;
- speaks in behalf of the rights of women, 136;
- difficulties in securing an education for children, 138;
- connection with the Underground Railway, 158, 161;
- describes effects of the Fugitive Slave Law, 168;
- shelters fugitive slaves from Christiana, Pa., 172;
- reflections upon the Dred Scott Decision, 173;
- meeting with Harriet Beecher Stowe, 176;
- outlines plan for an industrial school for Free Negroes, 178;
- visits John Brown at Springfield, Mass., 183;
- visits John Brown at Chambersburg, 189;
- opposes John Brown’s plan for capture of Harper’s Ferry, 191;
- flees to Canada, 192;
- takes passage for England, 193;
- recalled to America by death of daughter, 194;
- on the effect of John Brown’s death, 197;
- supports Lincoln against Douglas, 203;
- address in Chicago in 1854, 204;
- welcomes the impending conflict, 216;
- urges the enlistment of Negro soldiers, 220;
- assists in organization of Negro regiments, 222;
- issues an appeal to the colored people, 224;
- first interview with President Lincoln, 229;
- promised position of adjutant, 232;
- Lincoln seeks aid to encourage escape of slaves from Southern states,
- 236;
- invited to take tea with the President, 238;
- description of reception of Emancipation Proclamation in Boston, 239;
- attends President’s reception, 240;
- speaks at Rochester on Lincoln’s assassination, 243;
- opposes dissolution of Anti-Slavery Society, 245;
- becomes Lyceum lecturer, 256;
- favors citizenship for Negro, 258;
- interviews President Johnson, 260;
- replies to President’s arguments against Negro suffrage, 261;
- writes address to Senate, 264;
- elected delegate to National Loyalists’ Convention, 265;
- removes to Washington, D. C., 273;
- publishes _The New National Era_, 274;
- becomes President of Freedman’s Bank, 276;
- councilman of District of Columbia, 283;
- member of legislature of District of Columbia, 283;
- member of the San Domingan annexation commission, 283;
- addresses colored convention at New Orleans, 284;
- marshal of District of Columbia, 1877, 287;
- Baltimore address on “Our National Capital,” 288;
- Recorder of Deeds, District of Columbia, 294;
- Minister to Hayti, 297;
- manners and personal character, 303;
- marries Miss Helen Pitts, 306;
- Decoration Day address at Arlington, 309;
- address at Washington, D. C., on Lincoln, 311;
- address before Tennessee Colored Agricultural and Mechanical
- Association at Nashville, 312;
- speech on Supreme Court Decision on Civil Rights Bill, 316;
- opposes Chinese exclusion, 320;
- views on religion, 321;
- opposes the Kansas exodus, 323;
- visits Thomas Auld, 327;
- visits the Lloyd estate, 329;
- address on John Brown at Harper’s Ferry, 330;
- address at Tuskegee, 1892, 333;
- aids in foundation of Industrial School at Manassas, Va., 333;
- Haytian Commissioner at World’s Fair, 1893, 334;
- address on Negro Day, World’s Fair, 335;
- protests against lynching, 337;
- death, 1895, 340;
- funeral services, 342;
- memorial services at Rochester, 344.
-
- Douglass, H. Ford, colored anti-slavery orator, 155.
-
- Douglass, Lewis H., son of Frederick, enlists in army, 223;
- visits President Andrew Johnson, 260.
-
- Douglas, Stephen A., policy in Kansas-Nebraska Bill, 198;
- debate with Lincoln, 199;
- position of, defined, 202.
-
- Downing, George T., visits President Johnson, 260.
-
- Downing, Thomas, agent for Underground Railway, 161.
-
- Dred Scott Decision, influence on anti-slavery agitation, 173, 195.
-
- Dunlop, Alexander, representative Negro, one of delegation to visit
- President Johnson, 261.
-
- Dunn, Oscar J., Lieutenant-Governor of Louisiana, 279.
-
- Durham, John S., address at Douglass’s funeral, 343.
-
-
- Education, Negro, early efforts of, 151.
-
- Elliott, Robert Brown, Negro member of Congress, 280.
-
- Ellis, Charles M., aids in rescue of Anthony Burns, fugitive slave,
- 169.
-
- Emerson, Ralph Waldo, uses influence to open public lectures to
- Negroes, 66.
-
- Everett, Edward, Governor of Massachusetts, favors law to prevent
- printing of Abolition literature, 87.
-
-
- Fish, Benjamin, friend of Douglass, 138.
-
- Fortin, Charlotte L., Negro educator, 153.
-
- Foster, George, anti-slavery speaker, 73;
- associated with Douglass in the “one hundred anti-slavery
- conventions,” 79.
-
- Foster, Stephen S., takes part in the Rhode Island contest over new
- constitution, 76.
-
- “Free Church,” of Scotland, anti-slavery agitation in, 104.
-
- Freeland, William, hires Douglass, 41.
-
- Free Soil Democrats, rally to support the Union, 215.
-
- Fugitive Slave Law, 166;
- arouses resentment in North, 168.
-
-
- Ganes, John F., efforts to establish ante-bellum Negro education, 151.
-
- Gannett, Rev. W. C., delivers Douglass’s funeral oration, 344.
-
- Garnett, Henry Highland, assists Douglass at Buffalo anti-slavery
- meeting, 80;
- agent for the Underground Railway, 161.
-
- Garrison, William Lloyd, address at anti-slavery convention at
- Nantucket, 71;
- assaulted in Baltimore, 88;
- delegate National Anti-Slavery Society, 96;
- in Scotland, 103;
- attacked by papers in Cleveland, 118;
- opposes Douglass’s anti-slavery paper, 121;
- conception of slavery, 122;
- and the slave-holder, 128;
- relation to Douglass, 132;
- comment on Shadrach case, 170.
-
- Gay, Sidney Howard, takes part in the “one hundred anti-slavery
- conventions,” 79.
-
- Gibbs, Mifflin W., colored anti-slavery orator, 155.
-
- Giddings, Joshua R., contributes to support of _North Star_, 125;
- favors policy of conciliation to South, 213.
-
- Gleaves, Robert H., Lieutenant-Governor of South Carolina, 279.
-
- Goodell, William, delegate National Anti-Slavery Society, 96.
-
- Gray, John A., friend of Douglass, 138.
-
- Greeley, Horace, letter to President Lincoln, 219;
- protests against treatment of Negro soldiers, 227.
-
- Green, Beriah, delegate National Anti-Slavery Society, 96.
-
- Grimké, Rev. F. J., address at Douglass’s funeral, 343.
-
-
- Hale, John P., criticised by Douglass, 134.
-
- Hall, Primus, ante-bellum Negro teacher, 151.
-
- Hallowell, William, friend of Douglass, 138.
-
- Hardy, Mrs. Neal, binds Douglass’s wounds at Richmond, Indiana, 82.
-
- Harlan, John Marshall, Associate Justice United States Supreme Court,
- attends Douglass’s funeral, 343.
-
- Harper, Frances Ellen Watkins, Negro educator, 153.
-
- Harper’s Ferry, John Brown’s preparations for assault upon, 189.
-
- Hayti, at World’s Fair, Chicago, 334.
-
- Higginson, Thomas Wentworth, aids in rescue of Anthony Burns, fugitive
- slave, 169.
-
- Hoar, Senator George Frisbie, at Douglass’s funeral, 343.
-
- Holland, Frederick May, describes effect of Fugitive Slave Law, 167;
- “Life” of Douglass quoted, 204.
-
- Holley, Myron, friend of Douglass, 138.
-
- Howard, General O. O., head of Freedmen’s Bureau, 251.
-
- Howard University, influence of Douglass at, 339.
-
- Howitt, William, remarks concerning Douglass, 110.
-
- Humphrey, Richard, bequeaths funds for Negro education, 152.
-
- Hutchinson family, lends Douglass support on voyage to England, 100.
-
-
- Improvement Society, East Baltimore, for free colored people, 52.
-
- Industrial school, Douglass’s plan for, 178.
-
-
- Jackson, President Andrew, proposes Congressional legislation to
- prevent circulation of Abolition literature through mails, 88;
- address to colored troops, 149.
-
- Jenifer, Rev. J. T., sermon at Douglass’s funeral, 343.
-
- Johnson, Andrew, President United States opposes Negro suffrage, 261.
-
- Johnson, Nathan, gives Douglass a refuge, 63.
-
- Jones, John, representative Negro, one of delegation to President
- Johnson, 260.
-
-
- Kansas-Nebraska Bill, effect on anti-slavery sentiment, 173.
-
- Kelley, Abby, takes part in contest in Rhode Island over new
- constitution, 76.
-
-
- Lafayette, General, member of the Colonization Society, 146.
-
- Langston, John M., colored anti-slavery orator, 155.
-
- Lawson, “Uncle,” 29.
-
- Lecture platform, effect upon anti-slavery agitation, 92.
-
- _Liberator, The_, Garrison’s paper, 124, 128.
-
- Lincoln, Abraham, debate with Douglass, 199.
-
- Lloyd, Colonel Edward, vast estate of, 18.
-
- Lloyd, Daniel, kindness to Douglass, 23.
-
- Loguen, Rev. J. W., agent for the Underground Railway, 161.
-
- Lovejoy, Rev. Elijah P., Abolitionist, killed at Alton, Ill., 89.
-
- Lundy, Benjamin, Abolitionist, assaulted in Baltimore, 88;
- work for emancipation, 97.
-
- Lynch, John R., member of Congress from Louisiana, 280.
-
-
- Madison, James, member of the Colonization Society, 146.
-
- Mann, Horace, uses influence to open public lectures to Negroes, 66;
- contributes to support of _North Star_, 125.
-
- Marcy, William L., Governor of New York, favors law to suppress
- printing of Abolition literature, 87.
-
- Marshall, John, Chief Justice, member of the Colonization Society, 146.
-
- Martin, J. Sella, at Boston celebration Emancipation Proclamation, 239.
-
- Matthews, William E., visits President Andrew Johnson, 260.
-
- May, Samuel J., letter to Garrison concerning Douglass, 133.
-
- McClellan, General George B., warns slaves not to seek protection with
- Northern armies, 217.
-
- Metzerott’s Hall, Douglass’s address at, 340.
-
- Missionary movement, effect upon anti-slavery agitation, 91.
-
- Missouri Compromise, puts question of slavery before people, 93.
-
- Mob, destroys printing press of _The Philanthropist_, 89;
- interrupts Rev. O. Scott’s lecture, 89;
- demolishes Academy for Negroes at Canaan, N. H., 89;
- disperses meeting of female anti-slavery society at Boston, 89;
- breaks up an anti-slavery meeting at Syracuse, 89;
- of Yale students, 89;
- burns Pennsylvania Hall, Philadelphia, 89;
- indulges in two days’ riot at Philadelphia, 90.
-
- Monroe, James, takes part in Rhode Island contest over new
- constitution, 76;
- associated with Douglass in the “one hundred anti-slavery
- conventions,” 79.
-
- Mott, Lucretia, connection with anti-slavery and woman’s suffrage, 136.
-
- Myers, Stephen J., agent for the Underground Railway, 161.
-
-
- “Narrative,” Frederick Douglass’s, 99.
-
- Negroes, free, Douglass’s call to arms of, 223.
-
- “Negro Pews,” at Hartford, Conn., 142.
-
- Negro soldiers, at Port Royal, 221;
- at Fort Wagner, 222;
- proclamation of Confederate Government concerning, 227;
- Douglass’s remarks on treatment of, 228;
- number enlisted, 233.
-
- Negro Volunteers, Fifty-fourth and Fifty-fifth Massachusetts Regiments,
- 222.
-
- Newspapers, colored, _Ram’s Horn_, _The Mystery_, _The Disfranchised
- American_, _The Northern Star_, _The Colored Farmer_, 124.
-
- Nichols, M. J. N., address at Douglass’s funeral, 343.
-
- _North Star_, Douglass’s anti-slavery paper, 125;
- Douglass’s early experiences with, 137.
-
-
- O’Connell, Daniel, relation to Douglass, 102.
-
- _Orator, Columbian_, Douglass’s first book, 26, 42.
-
- Otis, Joseph E., representative Negro, one of delegation to President
- Johnson, 260.
-
-
- Palfrey, John G., contributes to support of _The North Star_, 125.
-
- Parker, Theodore, aids in rescue of Anthony Burns, fugitive slave, 169.
-
- Peabody, Ephraim, gives Douglass his first job, 64.
-
- Peace Convention, London, addressed by Douglass, 107.
-
- Peel, Sir Robert, Douglass meets, 101.
-
- Pennington, Rev. J. W. C., 62.
-
- Peterson, John, efforts to establish ante-bellum Negro education, 151.
-
- Phillips, Wendell, advises Douglass to throw his “Narrative” in the
- fire, 75;
- aids in rescue of Anthony Burns, fugitive slave, 169.
-
- Pillsbury, Parker, takes part in Rhode Island contest over new
- constitution, 76.
-
- Pinchback, P. B. S., Lieutenant-Governor of Louisiana, 279.
-
- Pomeroy, S. C., United States Senator, introduces Douglass to President
- Lincoln, 228.
-
- Port Royal, proclamation of T. W. Sherman at, 218.
-
- Porter, Samuel D., friend of Douglass, 138.
-
- Post, Isaac, friend of Douglass, 138.
-
- Press, its effect upon anti-slavery agitation, 92.
-
- Prichard, his _Natural History of Man_, 17.
-
- “Prigg Case,” in regard to runaway slaves, 166.
-
- “Protection, Sailor’s,” character of, 59.
-
- Purvis, Robert, Vice-President of National Anti-Slavery Society, 155.
-
-
- Quincy, Edmund, praises _The North Star_, 126.
-
-
- Raid, John Brown, intensifies hatred of Negro, 195.
-
- Railroads, regulations enforced against free colored people, 54.
-
- Railway, Underground, 158;
- Western and Southwestern branches, 162.
-
- _Ram’s Horn_, colored newspaper, 123.
-
- Ransier, Alonzo J., Lieutenant-Governor of South Carolina, 279.
-
- Ray, Charles M., assists Douglass at Buffalo anti-slavery meeting, 80.
-
- Revels, Hiram, United States Senator from Mississippi, 279.
-
- Remond, Charles Lennox, takes part in the “one hundred anti-slavery
- conventions,” 79;
- assists at Buffalo anti-slavery meetings, 80;
- agent for the Underground Railway, 161.
-
- Rich, William, agent for the Underground Railway, 161.
-
- Richardson, Mrs. Ellen, purchases Douglass’s freedom, 112.
-
- Richardson, Mrs. Henry, purchases Douglass’s freedom, 112.
-
- Ross, A. W., representative Negro, one of the delegation to President
- Johnson, 260.
-
- Russell, Lord John, 101.
-
- Russell, Thomas, at Boston celebration of Emancipation Proclamation,
- 239.
-
-
- Schurz, Carl, report on Southern conditions, 248.
-
- Scott, Rev. O., Abolitionist, prevented from delivering Abolitionist
- lecture at Worcester, Mass., 1835, 89.
-
- Sewall, Mrs. May Wright, 341;
- address at Douglass’s funeral, 343.
-
- Seward, William H., contributes to support of _North Star_, 125;
- favors policy of conciliation to South, 213;
- declaration defining issues of the war, 217.
-
- Shadrach, fugitive slave, the case of, 171.
-
- Shaw, Colonel Robert Gould, commands first Negro regiment, 222.
-
- Sherman, General T. W. proclamation at Port Royal, 218.
-
- Sherman, Senator, John, at Douglass’s funeral, 343.
-
- Slavery and anti-slavery, issues defined, 94.
-
- Smalls, Robert, Negro member of Congress, 280.
-
- Smith, Gerrit, distinguished from Garrison, 122;
- contributes to support the _North Star_, 125;
- member of the Colonization Society, 146.
-
- Smith, Doctor James McCune, colored anti-slavery orator, 155;
- agent for the Underground Railway, 161.
-
- Stanton, Edwin M., Secretary of War, offers Douglass commission in
- army, 232.
-
- Stearns, Major George L., writes to Douglass in behalf of Negro
- soldiers, 227.
-
- St. Michaels, Douglass’s early home, 35.
-
- Still, William, anti-slavery author, 155;
- agent for the Underground Railway, 161.
-
- Story, Joseph, Justice Supreme Court, decision in the “Prigg Case,”
- 166.
-
- Stowe, Harriet Beecher, 174.
-
- Sumner, Charles, uses influence to open public lectures for Negroes,
- 66;
- contributes to support of _North Star_, 125.
-
-
- Tappan, Arthur, 61;
- chosen President National Anti-Slavery Society, 96.
-
- Tappan, Lewis, 61.
-
- Temperance Convention, World’s, addressed by Douglass, 106.
-
- Thompson, George, Abolitionist, in Scotland, 104.
-
- Thompson, John W., plans erection of Douglass statue, 347.
-
- Tilton, Theodore, marches with Douglass at National Loyalists’
- Convention, 269.
-
- Tracy Seminary, Douglass’s daughter compelled to leave, 138.
-
- Tract Society, effect upon anti-slavery agitation, 91.
-
- Tuskegee, Douglass visits, 333.
-
-
- “Vigilance Committee,” of anti-slavery society, work of in
- Pennsylvania, 163.
-
-
- Ward, Samuel R., colored anti-slavery orator, 155.
-
- Webster, Daniel, remarks on growth of cotton industry, 84;
- member of the Colonization Society, 146;
- favors Fugitive Slave Law, 166.
-
- Wells, Nelson, efforts to establish ante-bellum Negro education, 151.
-
- Whipper, William, agent for the Underground Railway, 161;
- one of delegation to President Johnson, 260.
-
- Whittier, John G., delegate National Anti-Slavery Society, 96.
-
- Winthrop, Senator Robert C., at Faneuil Hall after fall of Richmond,
- 242.
-
- Wise, Henry A., Governor of Virginia, letter to President Buchanan,
- 192.
-
- Wright, Elizur, delegate National Anti-Slavery Society, 96.
-
- Wright, Frances, connection with anti-slavery and woman’s suffrage,
- 136.
-
- Wright, Theodore S., assists Douglass at Buffalo anti-slavery meeting,
- 80.
-
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Frederick Douglass, by Booker T. Washington</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
-at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Frederick Douglass</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Booker T. Washington</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: January 3, 2023 [eBook #69692]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Richard Tonsing and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FREDERICK DOUGLASS ***</div>
-
-<div class='tnotes covernote'>
-
-<p class='c000'><strong>Transcriber's Note:</strong></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c001'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>AMERICAN CRISIS BIOGRAPHIES</span></div>
- <div class='c002'>Edited by</div>
- <div><span class='large'>Ellis Paxson Oberholtzer, Ph. D.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='border'>
-
-<div class='chapter ph2'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c001'>
- <div><span class='blackletter'>The American Crisis Biographies</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c003'>Edited by Ellis Paxson Oberholtzer, Ph.D. With the
-counsel and advice of Professor John B. McMaster, of
-the University of Pennsylvania.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Each 12mo, cloth, with frontispiece portrait. Price
-$1.25 net; by mail, $1.37.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>These biographies will constitute a complete and comprehensive
-history of the great American sectional struggle in the form of readable
-and authoritative biography. The editor has enlisted the co-operation
-of many competent writers, as will be noted from the list given below.
-An interesting feature of the undertaking is that the series is to be impartial,
-Southern writers having been assigned to Southern subjects and
-Northern writers to Northern subjects, but all will belong to the younger
-generation of writers, thus assuring freedom from any suspicion of wartime
-prejudice. The Civil War will not be treated as a rebellion, but as
-the great event in the history of our nation, which, after forty years, it
-is now clearly recognized to have been.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Now ready:</p>
-
- <dl class='dl_1'>
- <dt>&#160;</dt>
- <dd><strong>Abraham Lincoln.</strong> By <span class='sc'>Ellis Paxson Oberholtzer</span>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&#160;</dt>
- <dd><strong>Thomas H. Benton.</strong> By <span class='sc'>Joseph M. Rogers</span>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&#160;</dt>
- <dd><strong>David G. Farragut.</strong> By <span class='sc'>John R. Spears</span>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&#160;</dt>
- <dd><strong>William T. Sherman.</strong> By <span class='sc'>Edward Robins</span>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&#160;</dt>
- <dd><strong>Frederick Douglass.</strong> By <span class='sc'>Booker T. Washington</span>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&#160;</dt>
- <dd><strong>Judah P. Benjamin.</strong> By <span class='sc'>Pierce Butler</span>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&#160;</dt>
- <dd><strong>Robert E. Lee.</strong> By <span class='sc'>Philip Alexander Bruce</span>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&#160;</dt>
- <dd><strong>Jefferson Davis.</strong> By <span class='sc'>Prof. W. E. Dodd</span>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&#160;</dt>
- <dd><strong>Alexander H. Stephens.</strong> By <span class='sc'>Louis Pendleton</span>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&#160;</dt>
- <dd><strong>John C. Calhoun.</strong> By <span class='sc'>Gaillard Hunt</span>.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<p class='c006'>In preparation:</p>
-
- <dl class='dl_1'>
- <dt>&#160;</dt>
- <dd><strong>Daniel Webster.</strong> By <span class='sc'>Prof. C. H. Van Tyne</span>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&#160;</dt>
- <dd><strong>John Quincy Adams.</strong> By <span class='sc'>Brooks Adams</span>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&#160;</dt>
- <dd><strong>John Brown.</strong> By <span class='sc'>W. E. Burghardt Dubois</span>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&#160;</dt>
- <dd><strong>William Lloyd Garrison.</strong> By <span class='sc'>Lindsay Swift</span>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&#160;</dt>
- <dd><strong>Charles Sumner.</strong> By <span class='sc'>Prof. George H. Haynes</span>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&#160;</dt>
- <dd><strong>William H. Seward.</strong> By <span class='sc'>Edward Everett Hale</span>, Jr.
- </dd>
- <dt>&#160;</dt>
- <dd><strong>Stephen A. Douglas.</strong> By <span class='sc'>Prof. Henry Parker Willis</span>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&#160;</dt>
- <dd><strong>Thaddeus Stevens.</strong> By <span class='sc'>Prof. J. A. Woodburn</span>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&#160;</dt>
- <dd><strong>Andrew Johnson.</strong> By <span class='sc'>Prof. Walter L. Fleming</span>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&#160;</dt>
- <dd><strong>Henry Clay.</strong> By <span class='sc'>Thomas H. Clay</span>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&#160;</dt>
- <dd><strong>Ulysses S. Grant.</strong> By <span class='sc'>Prof. Franklin S. Edmonds</span>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&#160;</dt>
- <dd><strong>Edwin M. Stanton.</strong> By <span class='sc'>Edwin S. Corwin</span>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&#160;</dt>
- <dd><strong>“Stonewall” Jackson.</strong> By <span class='sc'>Henry Alexander White</span>.
- </dd>
- <dt>&#160;</dt>
- <dd><strong>Jay Cooke.</strong> By <span class='sc'>Ellis Paxson Oberholtzer</span>.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_frontispiece.jpg' alt='_Frederick Douglass“' class='ig001'>
-</div>
-
-<div class='titlepage'>
-
-<div class='border'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>AMERICAN CRISIS BIOGRAPHIES</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='border'>
-
-<div>
- <h1 class='c007'><span class='sc'>Frederick Douglass</span></h1>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div>by</div>
- <div class='c002'><span class='xlarge'>BOOKER T. WASHINGTON</span></div>
- <div class='c002'>Author of “Up from Slavery,” “Working with the Hands,” etc.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='border'>
-
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_title.jpg' alt='' class='ig001'>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='border'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>PHILADELPHIA</div>
- <div>GEORGE W. JACOBS &#38; COMPANY</div>
- <div>PUBLISHERS</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c001'>
- <div><span class='small'>Copyright, 1906, by</span></div>
- <div><span class='small'><span class='sc'>George W. Jacobs &#38; Company</span></span></div>
- <div><span class='small'><em>Published, February, 1907</em></span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span>
- <h2 class='c008'>PREFACE</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c003'>The chance or destiny which brought to this land
-of ours, and placed in the midst of the most progressive
-and the most enlightened race that Christian
-civilization has produced, some three or four
-millions of primitive black people from Africa
-and their descendants, has created one of the most
-interesting and difficult social problems which any
-modern people has had to face. The effort to solve
-this problem has put to a crucial test the fundamental
-principles of our political life and the
-most widely accepted tenets of our Christian faith.
-Frederick Douglass’s career falls almost wholly
-within the first period of the struggle in which this
-problem has involved the people of this country,—the
-period of revolution and liberation. That
-period is now closed. We are at present in the
-period of construction and readjustment. Many of
-the animosities engendered by the conflicts and
-controversies of half a century ago still survive to
-confuse the councils of those who are seeking to
-live in the present and the future, rather than in
-the past. But changes are rapidly coming about
-that will remove, or at least greatly modify, these
-lingering animosities. This book will have failed
-of its purpose just so far as anything here said shall
-serve to revive or keep alive the bitterness of those
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>controversies of which it gives the history; it will
-have attained its purpose just so far as it aids its
-readers to comprehend the motives of, and the men
-who entered with such passionate earnestness into,
-the struggle of which it gives in part a picture—particularly
-the one man, the story of whose life is
-here narrated.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In the succeeding chapters, an effort has been
-made to present an account of the life of Frederick
-Douglass as a slave and as a public man during the
-most eventful years of the anti-slavery movement,
-the Civil War, the period of reconstruction, and
-the after years of comparative freedom from sectional
-agitation over the “Negro problem.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>To bring this study within the plan and purposes
-of the American Crisis Series of Biographies, such
-subjects as “The Genesis of the Anti-Slavery Agitation,”
-“The Fugitive Slave Law,” “The Underground
-Railway,” “The American Colonization
-Society,” “The Conflict in Kansas for Free Soil,”
-“The John Brown Raid,” “The Civil War,” “The
-Enlistment of Colored Troops,” and “Reconstruction,”
-have been given more space than they have
-received in earlier biographies.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>While it is true that Frederick Douglass would
-have been a notable character in any period, it is
-also true that in the life of hardly any other man
-was there comprehended so great a variety of incidents
-of what is perhaps the most memorable
-epoch in our history. The mere personal side of
-Douglass’s life, though romantic and interesting, is
-here treated only in outline.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>S. Laing Williams, of Chicago, Ill., and his wife,
-Fannie Barrier Williams, have been of incalculable
-service in the preparation of this volume.
-Mr. Williams enjoyed a long and intimate acquaintance
-with Mr. Douglass, and I have been
-privileged to draw heavily upon his fund of information.
-He and Mrs. Williams have reviewed
-this manuscript since its preparation and have
-given it their cordial approval.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In addition to these sources of information, I
-wish to make grateful acknowledgment of my indebtedness
-to Major Charles R. Douglass for the
-use of many printed addresses, and for interesting
-data showing his father’s work in the Underground
-Railway.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>I must also acknowledge my sense of gratitude
-for the opportunity afforded in this work of getting
-close to the heart and life of this great leader of my
-race. No Negro can read and study the life of
-Frederick Douglass without deriving from it courage
-to look up and forward.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>
- <h2 class='c008'>CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0'>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Chronology</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_11'>11</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>I.</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Frederick Douglass, the Slave</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_15'>15</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>II.</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Back to Plantation-Life</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_33'>33</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>III.</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Escape from Slavery; Learning the Ways of Freedom</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_54'>54</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>IV.</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Beginning of His Public Career</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_69'>69</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>V.</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Slavery and Anti-Slavery</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_83'>83</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>VI.</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Seeks Refuge in England</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_99'>99</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>VII.</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Home Again as a Freeman—New Problems and New Triumphs</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_116'>116</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>VIII.</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Free Colored People and Colonization</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_139'>139</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>IX.</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>The Underground Railway and the Fugitive Slave Law</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_157'>157</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>X.</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Douglass, Harriet Beecher Stowe and John Brown</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_174'>174</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>XI.</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Forebodings of the Crisis</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_195'>195</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>XII.</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Douglass’s Services in the Civil War</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_217'>217</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>XIII.</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Early Problems of Freedom</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_245'>245</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>XIV.</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Sharing the Responsibilities and Honors of Freedom</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_273'>273</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>XV.</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Further Evidences of Popular Esteem, with Glimpses Into the Past</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_302'>302</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>XVI.</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Final Honors to the Living and Tributes to the Dead</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_334'>334</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Bibliography</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_353'>353</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Index</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#Page_355'>355</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHRONOLOGY</h2>
-</div>
-
- <dl class='dl_2 c012'>
- <dt>1817—</dt>
- <dd>February. Born on a plantation at Tuckahoe, near the town of Easton, Talbot County, on
- the eastern shore of Maryland; the exact date not known. His mother, Harriet Bailey, was
- the slave of Captain Aaron Anthony, the manager of the estate of Colonel Edward Lloyd.
- </dd>
- <dt>1825—</dt>
- <dd>Sent to Baltimore to live with Hugh Auld, a relative of his master.
- </dd>
- <dt>1833—</dt>
- <dd>Returns to Maryland and becomes the slave of Thomas Auld, at St. Michaels, Talbot County;
- while here he has an encounter with the Negro slave-breaker, Covey.
- </dd>
- <dt>1836—</dt>
- <dd>First attempt to run away results in his being sent back to Baltimore where he is
- apprenticed by Thomas Auld to William Gardiner of Fells Point, to learn the trade of
- ship-calker.
- </dd>
- <dt>1838—</dt>
- <dd>September 3d. Makes his escape from Baltimore, reaching New York the next day. September
- 15th, according to the marriage certificate, possibly a day earlier, he marries a free
- colored woman, Anna Murray, who on receiving the news of his escape follows him to New
- York. They are directed to New Bedford, Mass., by Anti-Slavery friends where Douglass
- begins his life as a freeman. He changes his name from Frederick Augustus Washington
- Bailey, to Frederick Douglass.
- </dd>
- <dt>1841—</dt>
- <dd>August 11th. Makes his first speech before an Anti-Slavery convention and becomes a
- lecturer in the Anti-Slavery cause.
- </dd>
- <dt>1842—</dt>
- <dd>Participates in the campaign for equal rights in Rhode Island during the “Dorr Rebellion.”
- </dd>
- <dt>1843—</dt>
- <dd>Takes part in the campaign of “A Hundred Anti-Slavery Conventions”; his hand broken in a
- fight with a mob at Pendleton, Indiana.
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span></div>
- </dd>
- <dt>1845—</dt>
- <dd>Writes, in order to prove that he is what he proclaims himself, a fugitive slave,
- <cite>Narrative of Frederick Douglass</cite>, giving the names of his owners. This book
- was published by the Anti-Slavery Society. August 16th, sails for Liverpool, England,
- lest the publication of his biography should lead to his capture and reënslavement. He is
- received with enthusiasm in England and his freedom is purchased by two members of the
- Society of Friends.
- </dd>
- <dt>1846—</dt>
- <dd>August 7th. Addresses the “World’s Temperance Convention” at Covent Garden Theatre,
- London. December 5th, the papers are signed which grant him his freedom.
- </dd>
- <dt>1847—</dt>
- <dd>April 20th. Reaches America again. December 3d, the first issue of the <cite>North
- Star</cite>, subsequently <cite>Frederick Douglass’s Paper</cite>, is published, he
- having first removed to Rochester, N. Y. Following its establishment came his rupture
- with Garrison and the Abolitionist wing of the Anti-Slavery party.
- </dd>
- <dt>1848—</dt>
- <dd>September. Delivers an address before a colored convention at Cleveland, O., on farming
- and industrial education.
- </dd>
- <dt>1851—</dt>
- <dd>Announces his sympathies with the voting Abolitionists.
- </dd>
- <dt>1852—</dt>
- <dd>Supports the Free Soil party and is elected a delegate from Rochester to the Free Soil
- Convention at Pittsburg, Pa.
- </dd>
- <dt>1853—</dt>
- <dd>Visits Harriet Beecher Stowe at Andover, Mass., with reference to the forming of an
- industrial school for colored youth.
- </dd>
- <dt>1855—</dt>
- <dd><cite>My Bondage and My Freedom</cite> published in New York and Auburn.
- </dd>
- <dt>1856—</dt>
- <dd>Supports Frémont, the candidate of the Republican party, for President.
- </dd>
- <dt>1858—</dt>
- <dd><cite>Douglass’s Monthly</cite> is established. Its publication is continued until 1864.
- </dd>
- <dt>1859—</dt>
- <dd>August 20th. Visits John Brown at Chambersburg, Pa. This was his last interview with the
- old Anti-Slavery hero before the attack on Harper’s Ferry, three weeks later. At this
- interview John Brown made a final effort to induce him to join in the dangerous
- enterprise.
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span></div>
- </dd>
- <dt>1859—</dt>
- <dd>November 12th. Sails from Quebec on his second visit to England. This trip is undertaken
- because he is in danger of being implicated in the plot to cause an uprising of the
- slaves for which John Brown had already been executed.
- </dd>
- <dt>1860—</dt>
- <dd>Returns to the United States, called home by the death of his daughter, Anna.
- </dd>
- <dt>1860—</dt>
- <dd>December 3d. Attempts to speak in Tremont Temple, Boston, but the meeting is broken up.
- </dd>
- <dt>1863—</dt>
- <dd>Publishes in <cite>Douglass’s Monthly</cite> his address to colored men urging them to
- enlist in the Federal Army. He is instrumental in forming the Fifty-fourth and
- Fifty-fifth Massachusetts Regiments of colored soldiers. Subsequently he visits President
- Lincoln to secure fair treatment of the colored soldiers and is promised, by Secretary
- Stanton, a commission as Assistant Adjutant to General Thomas, which, however, he does
- not receive.
- </dd>
- <dt>1866—</dt>
- <dd>February 7th. Interviews President Johnson to urge upon him the wisdom of granting the
- suffrage to the freedmen. Issues shortly afterward an address in reply to President
- Johnson’s argument against granting the suffrage to Negroes. In September, is elected a
- delegate to the “National Loyalists’ Convention” in Philadelphia.
- </dd>
- <dt>1869—</dt>
- <dd>Becomes editor of the <cite>New National Era</cite> which he continued to edit until
- 1872, at a pecuniary loss of about $10,000.
- </dd>
- <dt>1871—</dt>
- <dd>Visits San Domingo as Secretary to the Commission, consisting of B. F. Wade, Dr. S. G.
- Howe and Andrew D. White, to determine the attitude of that country toward annexation to
- the United States. He is appointed a member of the upper house of the territorial
- legislature of Washington, D. C., but shortly resigns his position in favor of his son,
- Lewis. May 30th, he delivers the Decoration Day address at Arlington National Cemetery.
- Becomes president of the “Freedmen’s Savings and Trust Company.”
- </dd>
- <dt>1872—</dt>
- <dd>April. Presides at the National Convention of colored citizens held in New Orleans.
- Chosen elector-at-large from the State of New York on the Presidential ticket which
- elected General Grant to a second term and is afterward designated to carry the vote of
- the electoral college of New York to Washington.
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span></div>
- </dd>
- <dt>1876—</dt>
- <dd>April 14th. Delivers an address at the unveiling of the Lincoln Monument in Lincoln Park,
- Washington, D. C.
- </dd>
- <dt>1877—</dt>
- <dd>Appointed Marshal of the District of Columbia, which office he held until 1881.
- </dd>
- <dt>1878—</dt>
- <dd>May. Visits St. Michaels and is reconciled to his old master, Thomas Auld.
- </dd>
- <dt>1879—</dt>
- <dd>September 12th. Reads a paper before the American Social Science Association in which he
- opposes the Negro exodus to Kansas.
- </dd>
- <dt>1881—</dt>
- <dd>May. Appointed Recorder of Deeds in the District of Columbia. June 12th, visits the Lloyd
- plantation.
- </dd>
- <dt>1882—</dt>
- <dd>January. <cite>Life and Times of Frederick Douglass</cite> published. August 4th, his
- first wife dies: she was the mother of five children.
- </dd>
- <dt>1884—</dt>
- <dd>January 24th. Marries Miss Helen Pitts, of New York.
- </dd>
- <dt>1889—</dt>
- <dd>Appointed Minister and Consul General to Hayti.
- </dd>
- <dt>1893—</dt>
- <dd>Commissioner for the Haytian Republic at the World’s Fair at Chicago. Makes an address on
- Negro Day at the Fair.
- </dd>
- <dt>1895—</dt>
- <dd>February 20th. Dies at his home at Cedar Hill, Washington. Buried with honors from the
- Metropolitan Church (African Methodist Episcopal); public services being held
- subsequently in Rochester. His body finally interred beside those of his wife and
- daughter, in Mount Hope Cemetery, Rochester, N. Y.
- </dd>
- </dl>
-
-<div class='chapter ph1'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c001'>
- <div class='c013'>FREDERICK DOUGLASS</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>
- <h2 class='c014'>CHAPTER I<br> <span class='large'>FREDERICK DOUGLASS, THE SLAVE</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c003'>The life of Frederick Douglass is the history
-of American slavery epitomized in a single human
-experience. He saw it all, lived it all, and overcame
-it all. What he saw and lived and suffered
-was not too much to pay, however, for a great
-career. “It is something,” as he himself said, “to
-couple one’s name with great occasions, and it was
-a great thing to me to be permitted to bear some
-humble part in this, the greatest that had come
-thus far to the American people.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Tradition says he was of noble lineage, but of
-this there is no written record. Frederick Douglass
-was born in the little town of Tuckahoe in
-Talbot County on the eastern shore of Maryland,
-supposedly in the month of February, 1817. The
-exact date of his birth was made the subject of
-diligent search by him in the days of his manhood
-and freedom, but nothing more definite than the
-month and year could be established. He gleaned
-so much as this, he says, “from certain events,
-the date of which I have since learned.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>In the early life of this child of slave birth, there
-were several incidents that seemed to mark him for
-a high destiny. The very pretentiousness of the
-name he bore, Frederick Augustus Washington
-Bailey, was a possible indication of something unusual
-and promising in his appearance and demeanor.
-Though it is not known who was his
-father, it is fortunate that, out of the many uncertainties
-of his lowly origin, a reasonably clear
-outline of the personality of his mother has come
-to light and has been preserved. We cannot know
-her name or pedigree. The slave-child saw little
-of his slave-mother, but he made a great deal of
-this little. His references to her were frequent
-in his writings and public addresses, and they all
-indicate the pride and love of a heart true to its
-primal instincts.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>While he was a child, his mother was employed
-on a plantation, a distance of twelve miles from
-Tuckahoe. Her only opportunity of seeing her son
-was by walking the distance after her day’s work,
-to return to the field of her labors by dawn of the
-next day. To use his own language: “These little
-glimpses of my mother obtained under such circumstances
-and against such odds, meagre as they were,
-are indelibly stamped upon my memory. She was
-tall and finely proportioned; of dark and glossy
-complexion, with regular features; and among
-slaves she was remarkably sedate and dignified.
-She was the only slave in Tuckahoe who could
-read.” That she was a woman of marked superiority,
-and that her child inherited from her much
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>that raised him above the other slaves among whom
-he lived, can be easily believed. When he had
-grown to manhood and while reading Prichard’s
-<cite>Natural History of Man</cite>, he found in the features of
-“King Rameses the Great” a strong resemblance
-to his mother. There were four other children, one
-boy named Perry and three girls. So far as is
-known, the brother and sisters showed none of the
-marks of superiority that distinguished Frederick
-Augustus Washington Bailey.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Whatever training Frederick had up to eight
-years of age, he received from his Grandmother
-Bailey. It was in her cabin that he was born, and
-it was by her that he was cared for and nourished.
-He was very fond of this grandmother and has paid
-an affectionate tribute to her memory. She was a
-woman of strong character and of unusual intelligence.
-There were many things that she could do
-uncommonly well, such as gardening, and her good
-luck in fishing was proverbial. She was also famed
-as a fortune-teller and as such was sought far and
-wide by all classes of people. Because of her
-intelligence and natural gifts, she was allowed
-many privileges and a great deal of liberty; in her
-old age she was amply provided for by her master,
-and saved from hard toil. Judging from his frequent
-and fond references to his grandmother,
-young Douglass had better care and more attention
-than the ordinary slave-child; he probably had
-plenty to eat, and was taught good manners.
-Whatever it was possible for an impressionable
-mind to gain from contact with a strong and vigorous
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>nature, the lad received from this unusual
-woman.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Until he was seven years of age, young Fred felt
-few of the privations of slavery. In these childhood
-days, he probably was as happy and carefree
-as the white children in the “big house.”
-At liberty to come and go and play in the open
-sunshine, his early life was typical of the happier
-side of Negro life in slavery. What he missed of
-a mother’s affection and a father’s care, was partly
-made up to him by the indulgent kindness of his
-good grandmother.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The owner of Fred and of his mother, grandmother,
-sisters, and brother, was Captain Aaron
-Anthony. He was the proprietor of several plantations
-and about thirty slaves near Tuckahoe. But
-Captain Anthony was something more, and this fact
-became important in the subsequent history of young
-Frederick Bailey; he had the distinction of being
-the manager of the vast estate of Colonel Edward
-Lloyd, who belonged to one of the foremost families
-of Maryland, and who owned between twenty and
-thirty plantations with over one thousand slaves.
-His home was on a plantation situated about
-thirty-five miles southeast of Baltimore and on the
-banks of the Wye River, the mansion and its surroundings
-being typical of the splendor and power
-of the wealthy slave-holder. When young Douglass
-first gazed upon all these signs of wealth, he
-says: “I became impressed with the baronial
-splendors of the Lloyd mansion and the princely
-mode of living; the vast army of enslaved men,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>women, and children; the completeness of the government
-that made it almost impossible for any of
-these slaves to escape; the subordination of my own
-master; the great number of mechanics that were
-skilled in all the trades, and the tutors from New
-England that were hired to teach the Lloyd children.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Near the mansion stood the plain but commodious
-home of Fred’s master, Captain Anthony.
-The Anthony family consisted of Mrs. Lucretia
-Anthony, the wife; Richard and Fred Anthony,
-sons; and an only daughter, Lucretia, who became
-the wife of Captain Thomas Auld.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>When Fred was between seven and eight years of
-age, his grandmother was directed by her master to
-take her grandson to the Lloyd plantation. After
-the boy arrived at his new home, he was put in
-charge of a slave-woman for whom the only name
-we know is “Aunt Katy.” This change brought
-him the first real hardship of his life. As an early
-consequence of it, he lost the care and guidance of
-his grandmother, his freedom to play, good food,
-and that affection which means so much to a child.
-When he came under the care of Aunt Katy, he
-began to feel for the first time the sting of unkindness.
-He has given a very disagreeable picture of
-this foster-mother. She was a woman of a hateful
-disposition, and treated the little stranger from
-Tuckahoe with extreme harshness. Her special
-mode of punishment was to deprive him of food.
-Indeed he was forced to go hungry most of the time,
-and if he complained, was beaten without mercy.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>He has described his misery on one particular night.
-After being sent supperless to bed, his suffering
-very soon became more than he could bear, and
-when everybody else in the cabin was asleep, he
-quietly took some corn and began to parch it before
-the open fireplace. While thus trying to appease
-his hunger by stealth, and feeling dejected and
-homesick, “who but my own dear mother should
-come in?” The friendless, hungry, and sorrowing
-little boy found himself suddenly caught up in her
-strong and protecting arms. “I shall never
-forget,” he says, “the indescribable expression
-of her countenance when I told her that Aunt Katy
-had said that she would starve the life out of me.
-There was a deep and tender glance at me, and a
-fiery look of indignation for Aunt Katy at the
-same moment, and when she took the parched corn
-from me and gave me, instead, a large ginger-cake,
-she read Aunt Katy a lecture which was never
-forgotten. That night, I learned, as never before,
-that I was not only a child but somebody’s child.
-I was grander on my mother’s knee than a king
-upon his throne. But my triumph was short. I
-dropped off to sleep and waked in the morning to
-find my mother gone, and myself again at the
-mercy of the virago in my master’s kitchen.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>There is no record of another meeting between
-mother and son. She probably died shortly afterward,
-because if she had been within walking
-distance, he certainly would have seen her again.
-Her memory in his child’s mind was always that
-of a real and near personality. When he became
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>older, and conscious of his superiority to his fellows,
-he was wont to say: “I am proud to attribute
-my love of letters, such as I may have, not to my
-presumed Anglo-Saxon father, but to my sable, unprotected,
-and uncultivated mother.” Thus, after
-his mother died, his vivid imagination kept before
-him her image, as she appeared to him that last
-time he saw her, through all his struggles for a
-fuller and freer life for himself and his race.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>With the loss of his mother and grandmother,
-he came more and more to realize the peculiar relation
-in which he and those about him stood to
-Colonel Lloyd and Captain Anthony. His active
-mind soon grasped the meaning of “master” and
-“slave.” While still a lad, longing for a mother’s
-care, he began to feel himself within the grasp of
-the curious thing that he afterward learned to
-know as “slavery.” As he grew older in years
-and understanding, he came also to see what manner
-of man his master was. He described Captain
-Anthony as a “sad man.” At times he was very
-gentle, and almost benevolent. But young Douglass
-was never able to forget that this same kindly
-slave-holder had refused to protect his cousin from
-a cruel beating by her overseer. The spectacle he
-had witnessed, when this beautiful young slave was
-whipped, had made a lasting and painful impression
-upon him. Vaguely he began to recognize the
-outlines of the institution which at once permitted
-and, to a certain degree, made necessary these cruelties.
-It was at this point that he began to speculate
-on the origin and nature of slavery. Meanwhile
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>he became, in the course of his life on the
-plantation, the witness of other scenes, quite as harrowing,
-and the memory mingled with his reflections,
-and embittered them.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>During this time an event occurred which gave a
-new direction and a new impetus to the thoughts
-and purposes slowly taking form within him. This
-event was the successful escape of his Aunt Jennie
-and another slave. It caused a great commotion on
-the plantation. Nothing could happen in a Southern
-community that excited so many and such varied
-emotions as the escape of a slave from bondage:—terror
-and revenge; hope and fear, mingled with
-the images of the pursued and the pursuers, with
-speculation in regard to the capture of the fugitive,
-and with prayers for his success in the minds of the
-slaves.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Young Douglass had begun to feel the burden of
-slavery and already had a dim consciousness of its
-fundamental injustice, but up to this point, he had
-known no other world than this immense plantation,
-and no other people than these masters, overseers,
-and slaves. His horizon was further enlarged
-and his imagination quickened by talking with certain
-Negroes on the Lloyd plantation, who could
-recall the event of their being brought from far-off
-Africa in slave-ships. Speaking of his own state of
-feeling at this time, he says: “I was already a
-fugitive from slavery in spirit and purpose.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>From now on his quick and comprehending mind
-saw and suffered things that formerly never affected
-him. The hard and sometimes cruel discipline, toil
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>from sunrise to sunset, scant food, the stifling of ambitions,—all
-these began now to be perceived and felt,
-and the impression they left sank into the soul of
-this rebellious boy. He saw a slave killed by an
-overseer, on no other charge than that of being
-“impudent.” “Crimes” of this nature were committed,
-as far as he could see, with impunity, and
-the memory of them haunted him by day and by
-night.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Thus far Douglass had not felt the overseer’s
-whip. He was too small for anything except to run
-errands and to do light chores. Of course, he had
-been cuffed about by Aunt Katy; he says he seldom
-got enough to eat and he suffered continually from
-cold, since his entire wardrobe consisted of a tow
-sack. He was fortunate, however, in having two
-friends, who often saved him from the pangs of
-hunger, and who now and then gave him a word of
-kindness. One was young Daniel Lloyd, of the
-“great house,” and the other, Miss Lucretia, his
-master’s daughter. This lady seems to have had a
-real fondness for the boy, and would often give him
-something good to eat and at times caress him in
-such a way as to recall to his mind the few blessed
-moments he had known with his mother. Young
-Lloyd also often protected him from the impositions
-of other boys.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>To show how far the lad had advanced in his
-thinking, it is well to quote his own words on this
-point: “I used to contrast my condition with that
-of the blackbirds, in whose world and sweet songs,
-I fancied them so happy. Their apparent joy only
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>deepened the shadows of my sorrow. There are
-thoughtful days in the lives of children, at least
-there were in mine, when they grapple with all the
-primary subjects of knowledge, and reach in a moment
-conclusions which no subsequent experience
-can shake. I was just as well convinced of the unjust,
-unnatural, and murderous character of slavery
-when nine years old, as I am now (1881). Without
-any appeal to books, to laws, or to authorities
-of any kind, I came to regard God as our Father,
-and condemned slavery as a crime.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>When Fred became nine years old, the most important
-event in his life occurred. His master determined
-to send him to Baltimore to live with
-Hugh Auld, a brother of Thomas Auld. Baltimore
-at this time was little more than a name to young
-Douglass. When he reached the residence of Mr.
-and Mrs. Auld and felt the difference between the
-plantation cabin and this city home, it was to him,
-for a time, like living in Paradise. Mrs. Auld is
-described as a lady of great kindness of heart, and
-of a gentle disposition. She at once took a tender
-interest in the little servant from the plantation.
-He was much petted and well fed, permitted to wear
-boy’s clothes and shoes, and for the first time in his
-life, had a good soft bed to sleep in. His only duty
-was to take care of and play with Tommy Auld,
-which he found both an easy and an agreeable task.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Young Douglass yet knew nothing about reading.
-A book was as much of a mystery to him as the
-stars at night. When he heard his mistress read
-aloud from the Bible, his curiosity was aroused.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>He felt so secure in her kindness that he had the
-boldness to ask her to teach him. Following her
-natural impulse to do kindness to others and without,
-for a moment, thinking of the danger, she at
-once consented. He quickly learned the alphabet
-and in a short time could spell words of three syllables.
-But alas, for his young ambition! When
-Mr. Auld discovered what his wife had done, he
-was both surprised and pained. He at once stopped
-the perilous practice, but it was too late. The precocious
-young slave had acquired a taste for book-learning.
-He quickly understood that these mysterious
-characters called letters were the keys to a
-vast empire from which he was separated by an enforced
-ignorance. In discussing the matter with his
-wife, Mr. Auld said: “If you teach him to read,
-he will want to know how to write, and with this
-accomplished, he will be running away with himself.”
-Mr. Douglass, referring to this conversation
-in later years, said: “This was decidedly the first
-anti-slavery speech to which I had ever listened.
-From that moment, I understood the direct pathway
-from slavery to freedom.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>During the subsequent six years that he lived in
-Baltimore in the home of Mr. Auld, he was more
-closely watched than he had been before this incident,
-and his liberty to go and come was considerably
-curtailed. He declares that he was not
-allowed to be alone, when this could be helped, lest
-he would attempt to teach himself. But these were
-unwise precautions since they but whetted his appetite
-for learning and incited him to many secret
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>schemes to elude the vigilance of his master and
-mistress. Everything now contributed to his enlightenment
-and prepared him for that freedom for
-which he thirsted. His occasional contact with
-free colored people, his visit to the wharves where
-he could watch the vessels going and coming, and
-his chance acquaintance with white boys on the
-street, all became a part of his education and were
-made to serve his plans. He got hold of a blue-back
-speller and carried it with him all the time.
-He would ask his little white friends in the street
-how to spell certain words and the meaning of them.
-In this way he soon learned to read. The first and
-most important book owned by him was called
-the <cite>Columbian Orator</cite>. He bought it with money
-secretly earned by blacking boots on the streets. It
-contained selected passages from such great orators
-as Lord Chatham, William Pitt, Fox, and Sheridan.
-These speeches were steeped in the sentiments of
-liberty, and were full of references to the “rights
-of man.” They gave to young Douglass a larger
-idea of liberty than was included in his mere dream
-of freedom for himself, and in addition they increased
-his vocabulary of words and phrases. The
-reading of this book unfitted him longer for restraint.
-He became all ears and all eyes. Everything he saw
-and read suggested to him a larger world, lying just
-beyond his reach. The meaning of the term “Abolition”
-came to him by a chance look at a Baltimore
-newspaper.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Slavery and Abolition! The distance between these
-two points of existence seemed to have lessened
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>greatly, after he had comprehended their meaning.
-“When I heard the word ‘Abolition,’ I felt the
-matter to be my personal concern. There was hope in
-this word.” As he afterward went about the city
-on his ordinary errands, or when at the wharf, even
-performing tasks that were not set for him to do, he
-was like another being. That word “Abolition”
-seemed to sing itself into his very soul, and when he
-permitted his thoughts to dwell on the possibilities
-that it opened to him, he was buoyed up with joyous
-expectations. He tried to find out something from
-everybody. He learned to write by copying letters
-on fences and walls and challenging his white playmates
-to find his mistakes; and at night when no
-one suspected him of being awake, he copied from
-an old copy-book of his young friend Tommy. Before
-he had formulated any plans for freedom for
-himself, he learned the important trick of writing
-“free passes” for runaway slaves.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Notwithstanding his progress in gaining knowledge,
-his considerate master and kind mistress, his
-loving companion in Tommy, his good home, food
-and clothes, he was not happy or contented. None
-of these things could stifle his yearning to be free.
-He has aptly described his own feelings at this time
-in speaking of Mrs. Auld: “Poor lady, she did
-not understand my trouble, and I could not tell her.
-Nature made us friends, but slavery made us enemies.
-She aimed to keep me ignorant, but I resolved to know,
-although knowledge only increased my misery. My
-feelings were not the result of any marked cruelty
-in the treatment I received. It was slavery, not its
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>mere incidents, I hated. Their feeding and clothing
-me well, could not atone for taking my liberty from
-me. The smiles of my master could not remove the
-deep sorrow that dwelt in my young bosom. We
-were both victims of the same overshadowing evil,—she
-as mistress, I as slave. I will not censure her
-too harshly.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>But if his hopes and aspirations were excited by
-the vast and vague horizon which the thought of
-emancipation opened to him, he was, on the other
-hand, driven to something like despair when he
-considered how distant and inaccessible was this
-“land of freedom” of which he dreamed. The
-nearer and clearer appeared to him the possibility
-of this larger life, the more torturing became the
-restraints that kept him from seeking it. It was
-when thus pursuing in thought this phantom of a
-greater world although at the same time in despair
-of ever attaining it, that he found peace for a while
-in the consolation of religion. His imagination had
-been aroused by the preaching of a white minister,
-a Methodist, named Hanson. Feeling himself
-wretched and alone, he was in a state of mind, as so
-many others have been before and since, to find comfort
-in the thought of a kindly and overshadowing
-Power, a Protector to whom he might turn, in his
-great distress, without reserve and without misgiving.
-He surrendered himself completely to this new
-faith in God. In his search for more light, he met
-a lasting friend and guide in the person of a colored
-preacher to whom he fondly refers as “Uncle Lawson.”
-This good and pious old man lived very near
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>the home of Mr. Auld. Young Douglass said of
-him: “He was my spiritual father. I loved him
-intensely, and was at his house every chance I could
-get.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Douglass’s master and mistress knew that he had
-become religious, and though they were at that time
-but lukewarm in their support of the church, they
-respected the piety in the young slave and seem to
-have encouraged it. But unfortunately the boy’s
-interest in religion had increased his desire to read,
-in order to become thoroughly acquainted with the
-Bible. “I have gathered,” says Mr. Douglass,
-“scattered pages of the Bible from the filthy street gutters,
-and washed and dried them, that in moments
-of leisure I might get a word or two of wisdom from
-them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Uncle Lawson could read a little and Douglass,
-who went frequently with him to prayer meeting,
-spent much of his spare time on Sunday helping him
-decipher its pages. When his master learned what
-he was doing, he threatened to whip him if he went
-to Lawson’s again, but he stole away whenever he
-could and got his needed instruction in the simple
-lessons of faith.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Uncle Lawson was probably the first colored person
-that young Douglass had met who appreciated
-his longings and powers. He was also the first person
-who awakened in him a dim consciousness that
-he was destined for a public career. Speaking of
-this, Douglass once said: “His words made a deep
-impression upon me, and I verily felt that some
-such work was before me, though I could not see
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>how I could ever engage in its performance.” The
-old preacher could go no further than to give utterance
-to the familiar exhortations: “Trust in the
-Lord, the Lord can make you free”; “Ask in
-faith and He will give you what you ask.” The
-boy’s great respect for the honesty and piety of
-Uncle Lawson lent these words a deep significance,
-and he never forgot the lessons that he learned from
-this simple-minded man. How important was this
-teaching is evidenced by Mr. Douglass’s own testimony: “Thus
-assisted and thus cheered on under
-the inspiration of the preacher, I worked and prayed
-with a light heart, believing that my life was under
-the guidance of a wisdom higher than my own. I
-always prayed that God would in His great good
-mercy and His own good time, deliver me from my
-bondage.” After Douglass learned how to write
-with tolerable ease, he began to copy from the Bible
-and the Methodist hymn-books at night, when he
-was supposed to be asleep. He always regarded
-this religious experience as the most important part
-of his education; it had the effect, not only of enlarging
-his mind, but also of restraining his impatience,
-and softening a disposition that was growing hard
-and bitter with brooding over the disadvantages
-suffered by himself and his race. He greatly needed
-something that would help him to look beyond his
-bondage and encourage him to hope for ultimate
-freedom.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>While he was undergoing this, to him, novel religious
-experience, and while he was gradually being
-adjusted to the situation in which he found himself,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>there came one of those dreaded changes in the
-fortunes of slave-masters that made the status of the
-slave painfully uncertain. His real master, Captain
-Anthony, died, and this event, complicated with
-some family quarrel, resulted in Douglass being recalled
-from Baltimore to the plantation. This was
-a depressing incident in his slave-life. It is true
-that Mr. and Mrs. Auld were not at this time as
-gentle with him as when he first came to the city.
-He was under stricter discipline, was constantly
-watched, and his liberties were circumscribed in
-many ways that were both inconvenient and irritating.
-But in spite of all this he was comparatively free
-from the usual severities of slavery. He had many
-interests and many happy relationships that he was
-able to cultivate outside of the Auld household.
-He had become something of a leader among the
-young colored men of the city. He had taught
-many of them their letters. Among the white boys
-of his acquaintance he also had a large circle of
-friends, who loved him and were loyal to him.
-Most important of all was his affection for his religious
-teacher, Uncle Lawson. Through these attachments
-in the more complex life of the city, and
-the opportunities for mental and spiritual growth
-which they offered, he was able to throw off to a
-great degree the gloom and doubt of his earlier
-youth. He had begun to feel that he was actually
-preparing himself for that larger life of leadership
-in freedom, that had been hinted to him by Uncle
-Lawson. But all these happy relations were rudely
-severed when he was recalled to the plantation.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>“It did seem,” he said, “that every time the
-young tendrils of my affection became attached, they
-were rigidly broken off by some unnatural, outside
-power, and I was looking away to Heaven for the
-rest denied to me on earth.”</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER II<br> <span class='large'>BACK TO PLANTATION LIFE</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c003'>When young Douglass left Baltimore to go back
-to the plantation, he was about sixteen years of age;—strong,
-healthy, and fully capable of the hard work
-of a field hand. But this was not the most difficult
-task he now had to face. Conditions that he met
-there were to test his character as it had never been
-tested before, and the trials he endured during this
-period profoundly influenced all his future life.
-For the first time in many years, he was to feel the
-“pitiless pinchings of hunger.” He says: “So
-wretchedly starved were we that we were compelled
-to live at the expense of our neighbors, or steal from
-our own larder. This was a hard thing to do, but
-after much reflection, I reasoned myself into the belief
-that there was no other way to do—and after
-all there could be no harm in it, considering that
-my labor and person were the property of Master
-Thomas, and that I was deprived of the necessaries
-of life. It was simply appropriating what was my
-own, since the health and strength derived from
-such food were exerted in his service. To be sure,
-this was stealing according to the law and gospel I
-had heard from the pulpit, but I had begun to attach
-less importance to what dropped from that
-quarter, on certain points.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>Having found a principle upon which he could
-justify, against the precepts of morality, the practice
-of stealing from his own master, in order to get
-enough to eat, it was not difficult to go farther and
-discover a warrant based on grounds quite as logical,
-for the habit of stealing from others beside his
-master, when the same necessity seemed to justify it.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“I am not only a slave of Master Thomas,” he
-argued, “but I am also a slave of society at large.
-Society at large has bound itself in form and fact to
-assist Master Thomas in robbing me of my liberty
-and the just reward of my labor; therefore whatever
-rights I have against Master Thomas, I have
-equally against those confederated with him.” It
-is thus that Mr. Douglass, writing years afterward,
-construed the argument with which the boy solved
-the doubts and questions arising in his mind when
-he found himself following the custom, prevalent
-among the slaves, of persistent petty stealing.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Whatever one may think of this theory as a justification
-for the practice, it is interesting as showing
-in Douglass, even as a boy, the tendency to get clear
-ideas in regard to his own conduct and the conduct
-of those about him, and to make his actions conform
-to some fundamental rule. A boy who was disposed
-to think thus clearly and to apply the test of elementary
-principles to the lives and actions of those
-about him, was already a dangerous slave. And so
-the summer of 1833 found Douglass more determined
-than ever to run away.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Meanwhile he tells us that there were several
-incidents which served still further to shape in his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>mind the view of his master and the class his master
-represented. About this time there was a religious
-revival in the neighborhood of St. Michaels,
-where Douglass lived. Master Thomas became
-converted and was afterward a devoted member and
-class-leader in the Methodist church. Young Douglass
-attended the camp-meeting, and, from his position
-behind the preacher’s stand, where a space had
-been marked off for colored people, watched the
-process of conversion in his master with great interest
-and close attention.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Another episode tended to add to the perplexity
-in the young slave’s mind and still further undermine
-his faith in the moral superiority of the master-class,
-and in the religion which based its justification
-of slavery on the fact of that superiority.
-To add further to his confusion, he had read somewhere,
-in the Methodist discipline, that “the slave-holder
-shall not be eligible to an official station in
-the church.” When he saw Mr. Auld making
-open confession of his sins, and afterward given
-official position in the church, he felt sure that a
-great change must necessarily come over his disposition
-and character. But his master’s face,
-Douglass said, became more stern with increasing
-piety, and the discipline he enforced upon his slaves
-was even more rigid. This was a severe test of the
-religious convictions of the young slave-boy. He
-knew that religion had made him better, kinder,
-and more appreciative of all that was true and
-beautiful. It had also given him comfort during
-the period of his servitude. He had looked forward,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>with sincere faith in the power of religion,
-to some marked change in Master Thomas. The
-resulting experience left him disappointed and confused.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>At the request of an earnest and sincerely pious
-white man, named Wilson, Douglass had joined in
-an attempt to conduct a Sunday-school for young
-colored people. During the second meeting of this
-innocent company, it was violently broken up by a
-mob, chief among whom was his master, Thomas
-Auld. The men were armed with sticks and other
-missiles and drove away both pupils and teachers,
-warning them never to meet again. The only explanation
-given for this violent interruption of
-what seemed a harmless and worthy occupation,
-was the rough remark of one member of the party,
-that Douglass wanted to be another Nat Turner.
-The fear inspired by his unfortunate slave insurrection
-was responsible for much of the hardship
-which Negroes in the South, free and slave, were at
-this period compelled to endure. The memory of
-it hardened the heart of many a master against his
-slaves and made him cruel and suspicious where he
-would naturally have been kind and confident.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>But Thomas Auld seems not to have had even
-this excuse for some of his acts which still further
-embittered the young slave, already grown critical
-and suspicious of all that his master did. It was
-not long after his conversion, Douglass says, that
-he began to beat the boy’s crippled and unfortunate
-cousin, Henny, with unusual barbarity,
-finally setting her adrift to care for herself. All
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>these incidents crowded quickly upon the young
-slave’s mind at a time when he had already begun
-to test and measure the actions of his master and
-those about him by the principles of universal
-right and justice, which his study of the <cite>Columbian
-Orator</cite> had furnished him, and which his reflections
-and comparisons were steadily making more clear
-and definite. The effect was to render him bold
-and rebellious to such an extent that he soon became
-a fit subject to be “broken in” by some overseer,
-who knew how to handle “impudent” slaves.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>A man named Edward Covey, living at Bayside,
-at no great distance from the camp-ground where
-Thomas Auld was converted, had a wide reputation
-for “breaking in unruly niggers.” Covey was a
-“poor white” and a farm renter. To this man
-Douglass was hired out for a year. In the month of
-January, 1834, he started for his new master, with his
-little bundle of clothes. From what we have already
-seen of this sensitive, thoughtful young slave of seventeen
-years, it is not difficult to understand his state
-of mind. Up to this time he had had a comparatively
-easy life. He had seldom suffered hardships
-such as fell to the lot of many slaves whom he knew.
-To quote his own words: “I was now about to
-sound profounder depths in slave-life. Starvation
-made me glad to leave Thomas Auld’s, and the
-cruel lash made me dread to go to Covey’s.” Escape,
-however, was impossible. The picture of
-“the slave-driver,” painted in the lurid colors that
-Mr. Douglass’s indignant memories furnished him,
-shows the dark side of slavery in the South. During
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>the first six weeks he was with Covey, he
-was whipped, either with sticks or cowhides, every
-week. With his body one continuous ache from his
-frequent floggings, he was kept at work in field or
-woods from the dawn of day until the darkness of
-night. He says: “Mr. Covey succeeded in breaking
-me in body, soul, and spirit. The overwork
-and the cruel chastisements, of which I was the victim,
-combined with the ever growing and soul-devouring
-thought, ‘I am a slave—a slave for life, a
-slave with no rational ground to hope for freedom,’
-had done their worst.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>He confesses that at one time he was strongly
-tempted to take his own life and that of Covey.
-Finally, his sufferings of body and soul became so
-great that further endurance seemed impossible.
-While in this condition, he determined upon the
-daring step of returning to his master, Thomas
-Auld, in order to lay before him the story of abuse.
-He felt sure that, if for no other reason than the
-protection of property from serious impairment,
-his master would interfere in his behalf. He even
-expected sympathy and assurances of future protection.
-In all this he was grievously disappointed.
-Auld not only refused sympathy and protection, but
-would not even listen to his complaints, and immediately
-sent him back to his dreaded master to face
-the added penalty of running away. The poor lone
-boy was plunged into the depths of despair. A feeling
-that he had been deserted by both God and man
-took possession of him.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Covey was lying in wait for him, knowing full
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>well that he must return as defenseless as he went
-away. As soon as Douglass came near the place
-where the white man was hiding, the latter made a
-leap at Fred for the purpose of tying him for a
-flogging. But Douglass escaped and took to the
-woods where he concealed himself for a day and a
-night. His condition was desperate. He felt that
-he could not endure another whipping, and yet
-there seemed to him no alternative. His first impulse
-was to pray, but he remembered that Covey
-also prayed. Convinced, at length, that there was
-no appeal but to his own courage, he resolved to
-go back and face whatever must come to him. It
-so happened that it was a Sunday morning and,
-much to his surprise, he met Covey who was on his
-way to church, and who, when he saw the runaway,
-greeted him with a pleasant smile. “His religion,”
-says Douglass, “prevented him from breaking
-the Sabbath, but not from breaking my bones
-on any other day in the week.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>On Monday morning, Douglass was up early,
-half hoping that he would be permitted to resume
-his work without punishment. Covey was astir betimes,
-too, and had laid aside his Sunday mildness
-of manner. His first business was to carry out his
-fixed purpose of whipping the young runaway. In
-the meantime Fred had likewise fully decided
-upon a course of action. He was ready to submit
-to any kind of work, however hard or unreasonable,
-but determined to defend himself against an attempt
-at another flogging. In the cold passion that took
-possession of him, the slave-boy became utterly
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>reckless of consequences, reasoning to himself that
-the limit of suffering at the hands of this relentless
-slave-breaker had already been reached. He was
-resolved to fight and did fight. He began his morning
-work in peace, obeying promptly every order
-from his master, and while he was in the act of going
-up to the stable-loft for the purpose of pitching
-down some hay, he was caught and thrown by
-Covey, in an attempt to get a slip knot about his
-legs. Douglass flew at Covey’s throat recklessly,
-hurled his antagonist to the ground, and held him
-firmly. Blood followed the nails of the infuriated
-young slave. He scarcely knew how to account for
-his fighting strength, and his dare-devil spirit so
-dumbfounded the master, that he gaspingly said:
-“Are you going to resist me, you young scoundrel?”
-“Yes, sir,” was the quick reply.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Finding himself baffled, Covey called for assistance.
-His Cousin Hughes came to aid him, but as
-he was attempting to put a noose over the unruly
-slave’s foot, Douglass promptly gave him a blow in
-the stomach which at once put him out of the combat
-and he fled. After Hughes had been disabled,
-Covey called on first one and then another of his
-slaves, but each refused to assist him. Finding
-himself fairly outdone by his angry antagonist,
-Covey quit with the discreet remark: “Now, you
-young scoundrel, you go to work; I would not have
-whipped you half so hard, if you had not resisted.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Douglass had thus won his first victory and was
-never again threatened or flogged by his master.
-The effect of this encounter, as far as he himself
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>was concerned, was to increase his self-respect, and
-to give him more courage for the future. He said
-that, “when a slave cannot be flogged, he is more
-than half-free.” To the other slaves he became a
-hero, and Covey was not anxious to advertise his
-complete failure to break in this “unruly nigger.”
-It speaks well for the natural dignity and good sense
-of young Douglass that he neither boasted of his
-triumph, nor did anything rash as a consequence
-of it, as might have been expected from a boy of his
-age and spirit.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>On Christmas Day, 1834, young Douglass’s time
-with Covey was out. He then learned that he had
-been hired to a William Freeland, who owned a
-large plantation near St. Michaels, and by January
-1st, was with his new master. Mr. Freeland was a
-great improvement upon Covey. He was less direct
-in his professions, but more humane in his manner
-toward his slaves. He was what was called a “kind
-master.” He did not overwork or underfeed his
-slaves and he was sparing of the lash. All this was
-Paradise to young Douglass, when compared with
-the strenuous life he had led with Covey. The effect
-of so much kindness was evidenced in the character
-of the Freeland slaves. Mr. Douglass describes
-them as a superior class of men and women, and he
-loved, esteemed, and confided in them, as with real
-friends, generous and true.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>With these new and better conditions and with
-these superior companions in bondage, Douglass
-felt a renewal of that old impulse to do something
-for his fellow slaves. He naturally first turned
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>to the thought of teaching them to read and write.
-He found time and spirit again to look at his library,—the
-blue-back speller and the <cite>Columbian
-Orator</cite>. He first started a Sunday-school under the
-trees, at a safe distance from the “big house,”
-gathering together some thirty young people.
-They were making fine progress, when, one Sunday,
-his former experience was repeated, and they were
-rushed upon and scattered. The school was again
-started, however, and this time Douglass seems
-successfully to have evaded the vigilance of his
-master. In addition to the Sunday-school, he devoted
-three evenings a week to his fellow slaves.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>His leadership among all the Negroes was recognized
-and respected by them. This brought with it
-his first consciousness of that peculiar power over
-men, which in after-life made him so conspicuous a
-figure among the heroes of the Abolition struggle.
-The whole year at Freeland’s was spent in self-development
-and in the mental and spiritual improvement
-of his companions in bonds.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>At the end of this time he learned that his services
-had been hired for another twelve months to
-Mr. Freeland. This seemed to promise good for
-him in the future. The Bible, the spelling book,
-and the <cite>Columbian Orator</cite> were read and re-read
-and, at each new reading, he felt an enlargement
-of mind and an increasing thirst for liberty. The
-kindness of Mr. Freeland and the pleasant companionship
-of the Harris brothers and other slaves,
-served only to increase his discontent. He liked
-his master and would gladly have remained with him
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>as a free man, but he could never overcome his
-increasing impatience of the restraints of slavery,
-and, with this ambition for liberty, his troubles
-began. He made a solemn vow to himself that the
-year should not close without witnessing some
-earnest effort on his part to escape. This vow
-also included the freedom of his slave-companions,
-for whom he had conceived a lasting attachment.
-He succeeded in winning to his scheme five trusted
-confidants. These were John and Henry Harris,
-Sandy Jenkins, the footman; Charles Roberts, and
-Henry Bailey. Young Douglass impressed them
-with the perils of the undertaking. His knowledge
-of the difficulties of a successful escape, little
-as it actually was, surprised and awed them.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>When he had fully determined upon his plans, he
-found that it would perhaps require many weeks
-to perfect them. His first task was to study the
-character, the temperament, and the various personal
-qualifications of the men whom he proposed to
-make his partners in this dangerous undertaking.
-He must learn whether they were proof against the
-sin of betrayal under all possible circumstances.
-Each man must cultivate an unhesitating faith in
-the others. Each must have unlimited courage,
-both physical and moral. All must learn the tricks
-of self-concealment, and of assumed indifference
-and deception. They must understand the various
-kinds of perils they were likely to encounter. The
-kidnapper, the slave-catcher, the black and white
-detectives, and the whole range of restraints that,
-like a continuous wall, hemmed in a slave, must be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>considered and understood. If he had hope in his
-heart, he must not betray it by so much as a look,
-in manner or in speech. Overseers were all eyes
-and ears and quick to suspect something was
-wrong if a slave seemed unusually thoughtful,
-sullen, or happy. They were by no means easily
-deceived as to the real intention of a slave planning
-to run away. To become an object of suspicion
-was merely to insure that the suspected slave
-would be the more closely guarded. Young Douglass
-fully realized the severity of the penalty that
-must follow failure, but he never wavered in his determination
-to make a dash for liberty, at any
-cost.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Having satisfied himself that his companions
-were proof against treachery and were of the right
-sort of mettle, he began to study the practical
-means of escape. There were no well-marked
-routes from slavery to freedom, no highways, byways,
-or “underground railways,” known to him at
-that time. Such knowledge belonged wholly to the
-region north of the boundary line of freedom. He
-had heard of slaves escaping, but how they got
-away and by what route was always a mystery. He
-had heard that there was a region called North, and
-that in this far haven, white and black people
-alike were free. He had heard of a land called
-Canada, but its location on maps and charts was
-unknown to him. He had no conception of the
-physical size of the world. He had seen Baltimore,
-St. Michaels, and the adjoining plantations;
-beyond this all was blank. He knew something of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>theology, but nothing of geography. He did not
-know that there were states called New York and
-Massachusetts. New York City was the northern
-limit of his knowledge. He had received vague
-hints that the dominion of slavery was without
-boundary and that even in New York, there were
-slave-catchers and kidnappers. But it was at this
-time an unknown land.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In these difficulties, young Douglass looked
-steadily North in the direction of the free-states,
-seeking some chance guidance. His habit of reasoning
-out things that in any way affected his
-status as a slave and as a man, has already been
-noted. Everything that he saw, or heard, or read
-enlarged his knowledge of life and its meaning.
-His stay in Baltimore had been a sort of school to
-him. Here for the first time, he had seen free
-colored people; the coming and going of ships
-gave him his first ideas of direction and distance;
-the Chesapeake Bay was a thing of wonder;—all of
-which awakened in him many thoughts that led
-him away from bondage.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>While young Douglass was secretly working out
-his plans for escape, one of his confidants, Sandy,
-the footman, said to him: “I dreamed last night
-that I was roused from sleep by strange noises, like
-a swarm of angry birds; looking to see what it
-was, I saw you, Frederick, in the claws of a large
-bird surrounded by a large number of birds of all
-colors and sizes. They were all picking at you.
-Now I saw that as plain as I see you now, and
-honey, watch the Friday night dream; there is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>sump’n in it, sho’s you born, dere is indeed, honey.”
-Douglass confessed that the dream related to him
-by old Sandy disturbed him for awhile. He felt
-sure that his plans were seriously handicapped by
-unseen forces of some sort, but he soon regained his
-usual courage and overcame his superstitious apprehensions.
-The Saturday night before Easter had
-been fixed upon as the time for flight. A large
-canoe, owned by a Mr. Hamilton, had been seized
-and made ready for the confederates. They were
-to paddle down the Chesapeake Bay to its head.
-Douglass had already written out passes for each
-of the fugitives in the following form:—</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“This is to certify that I, the undersigned, have
-given leave to the bearer, my servant, John,
-full liberty to go to Baltimore to spend the Easter
-holidays.—W. H.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“<em>Near St. Michaels, Talbot Co., Md.</em>”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>On the night before the proposed flight, every
-possible detail had been rehearsed and arranged.
-The resolution of each party to the conspiracy
-was tested and proved firm, except that of Sandy,
-who, much to the disgust of Douglass, backed out.
-Early Saturday morning, they were all at work in
-the usual way. Douglass was the only one who was
-troubled with a presentiment of evil. He turned
-abruptly to Sandy, who was working near him,
-and said: “We are betrayed!” Within a short
-while his worst fears were being realized. Looking
-toward the “big house,” he easily discerned a
-stranger on horseback and an unusual stir. It was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>not long before he was abruptly accused of plotting
-to run away, and taken into custody. Thus it
-turned out that at the very time he had planned to
-be on the road to freedom, he was a prisoner bound
-for Easton, to be examined by a magistrate.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>His companions, the two Harris brothers, were
-likewise accused. Henry, however, was the only
-one who did not tamely submit to being arrested
-and handcuffed. When a revolver was pointed at
-him by the officer, he knocked it from the man’s
-hands and dared any one to shoot him. The recalcitrant
-slave was soon overpowered, however, and
-all were led away.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The excitement caused by Harris’s daring revolt
-served one purpose, of which young Douglass’s alertness
-enabled him to take advantage. He adroitly
-threw his pass, the only incriminating evidence
-against them, in the fire, and by some secret sign
-advised the others to eat theirs with their bread
-on the journey, which they did.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>When they were examined, each stoutly disclaimed
-all knowledge of plans for running away
-and denied that they had any intention of doing so.
-Notwithstanding the total lack of evidence against
-them, the officers and Douglass’s master were thoroughly
-convinced that they were plotting some wickedness.
-There was always something so mysterious,
-as well as commanding in the manner of young
-Douglass, that he was naturally regarded as the
-ringleader, when any misconduct of the slaves was
-complained of. His fellows in bonds treated him
-with a deference never shown toward any but white
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>people. As a slave he worked well and did his full
-duty, but his masters always regarded him with
-suspicion, and something akin to fear.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The examination of the four culprits must have
-afforded an interesting scene. Young Douglass,
-though a slave in chains, as well as a prisoner at
-the bar, had the temerity to assume the rôle of attorney
-and to attempt the defense of his comrades,
-for whose present predicament he felt himself responsible.
-When Thomas Auld insisted that the
-evidence in hand, showing the intention to run away,
-was strong enough to hang in case of need, Douglass
-promptly replied: “The cases are not equal. If
-murder were committed, the thing is done, but we
-have not run away. Where is the evidence against
-us? We were quietly at work.” Douglass was confident
-that the only tangible evidence against them
-had been skilfully destroyed, and he knew also
-that his companions had been slyly but effectively
-coached as to what to say and how to act when they
-came before the examining magistrate.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>So completely had they failed to make young
-Douglass and his companions convict themselves,
-that very shortly Mr. Freeland came to the jail and
-took home his own slaves, leaving Douglass still
-in confinement. He was glad to know that his
-companions had escaped punishment, but by this
-last separation from them he seemed to have reached
-the very depths of the desolation which it was the
-lot of a slave to experience.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Through the bars of his imprisonment, he could
-watch the slave-traders from Georgia, Alabama,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>and Louisiana apparently eager to get hold of him.
-He could even hear them pass comments upon his
-size, strength, and general appearance, and make
-guesses as to his age. For the first time since he left
-Covey’s, he felt both hopeless and helpless. If he
-should be sold and sent down into the far South, he
-well knew that all chances for escape would be cut
-off forever.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>While in this condition of dejection and hopelessness,
-the unexpected happened. His owner,
-Thomas Auld, who, in spite of Douglass’s rebelliousness,
-always cherished a peculiar fondness for
-him, ordered his release from jail, and at once
-decided to send him back to Baltimore to live with
-Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Auld. In telling Fred what
-he intended to do, he said that he wanted him to
-learn a trade, and that if he would behave himself
-and give him no more trouble, he would emancipate
-him when he became twenty-five years old.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The happy assurance that he was not to be punished
-and that he was again to have the privileges
-of the city, was at first almost too much to be
-believed. All of his hopes for ultimate freedom
-were revived and his confidence in himself, which
-had been severely shaken by his recent failure and
-disgrace, was renewed. Under the circumstances,
-it seems to have been the only wise and practicable
-course his master could pursue. Mr. Freeland
-would not again allow him to come upon his plantation;
-Covey had failed to break his spirit; and
-his reputation as a would-be runaway and a
-“smart nigger” made him a desperate asset in the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>slave-market of Talbot County. In sending him to
-Baltimore to learn a trade, with a possibility of
-ultimate freedom, it was thought that he would be
-more serviceable and more tractable. Then, again,
-the most threatening aspect of young Douglass’s
-attempted flight was the daring plot to use the
-Chesapeake Bay. Heretofore the slaves who had
-succeeded in making good their escape were compelled
-to find a path through deadly swamps and
-woods, other avenues being so carefully guarded
-that a successful runaway was very rare. Every
-effort, therefore, must be made to keep the Douglass
-venture a secret; he must be removed as far as
-possible from his old plantation-life. If he had had
-a different master, nothing could have saved him
-from the slave-traders. The good-heartedness of
-Thomas Auld was the only thing that preserved our
-young hero for that larger life which he was to make
-for himself, and help to make for so many others
-of his race.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>When, through the kindness of Mr. Auld, Douglass
-again turned his face toward Baltimore, he
-fully realized that the change was fraught with importance
-to him. He remembered that it was in
-this city he had caught the first suggestion that
-there was a life to be lived above the low levels of
-a slave. There, in the family of Hugh Auld, he
-had learned to wear clothes, had acquired good manners
-and the ability to read, and, for the first time,
-had felt, in the person of his teacher and benefactor,
-Mrs. Sophia Auld, the civilizing and softening
-touch of a superior woman’s kindness.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>To his alert and observing mind, Baltimore
-again became a real school. It quickened his perception,
-and fired his imagination, and was the place,
-above all others, short of a free state, where he
-most longed to live. Hugh Auld easily succeeded
-in getting young Douglass apprenticed to a calker,
-in the extensive ship-yards of William Gardiner,
-on Fell’s Point. The conditions under which he
-had to work were very trying; he did not mind the
-severe labor, but he was much disturbed by the intense
-prejudice existing among the white boys and
-mechanics. During the six months that he worked
-with this firm, every one seemed to have license to
-make use of and abuse him. He was not a coward,
-and would quickly strike back at a man who insulted
-or attempted to maltreat him. Finally, however,
-he was assaulted by a crowd of ruffians and
-frightfully beaten. His face was swollen and he
-was covered with blood. In this condition, he reported
-himself to Mr. Auld, who was furious when
-he beheld the pitiable state of his slave. Mrs.
-Auld took pity upon him and kindly dressed his
-wounds, and nursed him until they were healed.
-In the meantime he was angrily withdrawn from
-Mr. Gardiner’s employ, and it was sought to bring
-to punishment the perpetrators of the assault. Auld
-appeared with Douglass before a magistrate, and
-explaining how his slave had been attacked without
-provocation, demanded a warrant for the guilty
-parties, but both were surprised and chagrined
-when the magistrate replied: “I am sorry, sir,
-but I cannot move in this matter except upon the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>oath of a white man.” This incident made a deep
-impression on Douglass. It gave him a new and
-vivid sense of his helplessness and dependence, and
-measurably increased his determination to be free
-at any cost.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Hugh Auld soon after became foreman in the
-ship-yards of Walter Price, of Baltimore. He took
-Douglass with him and, under his protection, Fred
-finished learning his trade and within one year became
-able to command and receive from seven to
-nine dollars per week, the largest wages at that
-time paid for such labor. All of his earnings, of
-course, were turned over to his master. From now
-onward he had no trouble in securing work. He
-was permitted to find his own employment and
-make his own arrangements or contracts for pay.
-This was a distinct advancement over his former
-condition of servitude, and was his first experience
-of self-direction and self-dependence.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>He was soon known among the colored people
-of the city as a young man of singular power. His
-superiority of mind was recognized and, almost
-without being conscious of it, he became a leader.
-There was at that time an organization of free
-colored people, known as the East Baltimore Improvement
-Society. Although membership in this
-exclusive body was limited to free people, young
-Douglass was eagerly admitted. This was the first
-organization of any kind, outside of the church, to
-which he had ever belonged. It is probable that he
-had here his first opportunity to exercise his natural
-gift of eloquence.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>But with all these improvements in his conditions
-of life, he was not happy. A sense of bondage,
-however slight, made him restless and impatient.
-“Why should I be a slave?” was the question that
-went with him night and day. He has truly said:
-“To make a contented slave, you must make him a
-thoughtless one.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Kind treatment, liberty to come and go as he
-pleased and to make his own contracts for employment;
-mingling with freemen, as if he himself
-were free; the high esteem in which he was held
-by fellow workmen and employers, and by free
-people; and the promise of emancipation at twenty-five
-years of age, were no consolation to the heart
-that panted to be its own. He had already become
-too much of a man to remain a willing slave!</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER III<br> <span class='large'>ESCAPE FROM SLAVERY; LEARNING THE WAYS OF FREEDOM</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c003'>For the second time in his life, Frederick Douglass
-now began earnestly to study the possible means
-of permanently breaking his fetters. At the end of
-every week, when he turned his entire earnings over
-to his master, his sense of injustice and indignation
-increased. He was scarcely able to conceal his discontent.
-His intense longing to be free must have
-betrayed itself in his countenance, for very soon he
-noticed that he was being closely watched. The fact
-that he had at one time made an attempt to run away
-caused more or less uneasiness.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Young Douglass soon found that the difficulties of
-escape were quite as great in Baltimore as on the
-Freeland plantation. The railroads running from
-that city to Philadelphia were compelled to enforce
-the most stringent regulations with reference to colored
-people. Even free Negroes found it difficult
-to comply with them. Every one applying for a
-railway ticket was required to show his “free
-papers” and to be measured and carefully examined
-before he could enter the cars. Besides this, he was
-not allowed to travel by night. Similar regulations
-were enforced by steamboat companies. In addition
-to all these difficulties, every road and turnpike was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>picketed with kidnappers on the lookout for fugitive
-slaves. Douglass found it much easier to learn the
-obstacles than the aids to successful escape. The
-former were many and obvious; the latter were few
-and difficult to discover. It was impossible to profit
-by the experience of those who had run the gauntlet
-successfully, and whenever it was learned that some
-keen-scented slave had found a pathway to freedom,
-the information was carefully concealed from those
-in bonds. Every slave preparing to escape his
-fetters must act without guide or precedent, and
-form his own plan of deliverance.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Douglass was now convinced that he must hereafter
-be the arbiter of his own fortunes. He at once
-decided that his great need was money. The problem
-was how to get the necessary sum. His whole time
-and all of his earnings belonged to his master, and
-so long as this was the case the funds must still be a
-long way off. He finally determined to propose to
-his owner, Master Thomas Auld, that he be allowed
-to have his own time. In other words, he would
-agree to pay him so much a week, and all in excess
-of that sum he would keep as his own. This proposition
-merely angered Mr. Auld, who accused young
-Douglass of scheming to run away, and threatened
-him with severe punishment, if he ever mentioned
-such a thing again. But Douglass had too much at
-stake to give up. He made the same proposition to
-Master Hugh Auld and it was accepted. By the
-terms of this agreement young Douglass was to be
-allowed all of his time, and to make his own contracts
-and collect his own wages; while in return for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>these privileges, he was to pay his master three dollars
-each week, board and clothe himself, and buy
-his own tools.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>This was a pretty hard bargain, but it meant his
-first step toward freedom, so he entered upon it
-cheerfully. From May until August, 1838, he
-worked for himself under the above conditions, kept
-all his obligations, and was able to save out of his
-earnings a neat sum of money. In the month of
-August occurred an unfortunate interruption of his
-plans. One Saturday night, instead of taking his
-wages to his master, he was persuaded to go out of
-town to a camp-meeting. He convinced himself
-that there could be no objection to this, since he had
-the money and purposed turning it in early Monday
-morning. Owing to some misunderstanding, however,
-he was compelled to remain one day longer
-than he had intended. On coming back to the city,
-he went directly to his master and made his payment.
-Instead of being indifferent to his absence,
-Hugh Auld was almost beside himself with rage.
-Addressing Douglass, he said: “You rascal, I
-have a good mind to give you a sound whipping.
-How dare you go out of the city without my leave?
-Now, you scoundrel, you have done for yourself;
-you shall have your time no longer. The next thing
-I shall hear of you, will be your running away.
-Bring home your tools at once; I will teach you how
-to go off in this way.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Poor Douglass was for the moment dismayed by
-this very serious consequence of an innocent error of
-judgment. He had had his own way so long, he
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>had begun to feel that his master’s only interest in
-him was the regular payment of the three dollars per
-week which he had been receiving during the previous
-four months. All his hopes for liberty had
-been staked on the continuance of this arrangement
-for a few months longer. Douglass understood the
-man who was now his master. He had lived with
-him long enough not to take his threats too seriously.
-Mr. Auld would have been indeed shortsighted
-if he had not used an occasion of this kind
-to impress his slave with the seriousness of taking
-such a liberty. Douglass did not, therefore, lose
-heart and as a result of this episode, he made two
-important resolutions. One was to go out in search
-of work and return to the old contract; and the
-other was to fix September 3, 1838, as the day of his
-flight from slavery.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>He soon found good employment in the Butler
-ship-yards. Mr. Butler thought much of the young
-slave calker and gave him every opportunity to
-earn good wages. At the end of the first week, he
-presented to his master the whole of his earnings,
-amounting to nine dollars, which was accepted with
-evident satisfaction. For the moment Master Hugh
-seemed entirely to have forgotten the reprehensible
-conduct of only a few days before. Having thus
-shrewdly helped his master to recover his good temper
-and natural kindness, Douglass took special pains
-to keep him pleased and unsuspicious. The second
-week of his employment, he again turned over the
-whole amount of his wages, nine dollars. Mr. Auld
-was overjoyed at this earning capacity of Douglass
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>and as an evidence of it made him a present of
-twenty-five cents. In the last week he worked as a
-slave, he gave his master six dollars.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Ever since the first trouble with Auld, he had
-been pushing his plans to redeem his pledge to himself
-that he would run away on Monday, September
-3, 1838. These were anxious days and many small
-details had to be mastered. He must carefully avoid
-anything in manner or word which could excite the
-slightest suspicion. He had to test the fidelity of a
-number of free colored people whose aid, in secret
-ways, was very essential to him. Who these persons
-were, has never been revealed and in fact, it
-was not until many years after emancipation that
-Mr. Douglass disclosed to the public how he succeeded
-in making his daring escape. “Murder itself,”
-he says, “was not more severely and surely
-punished in the state of Maryland than aiding and
-abetting the escape of a slave.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Young Douglass’s flight had not outward semblance
-of dramatic incident or thrilling episode and
-yet, as he modestly says, “the courage that could
-risk betrayal and the bravery which was ready to
-encounter death, if need be, in pursuit of freedom,
-were features in the undertaking. My success was
-due to address rather than to courage, to good luck
-rather than bravery. My means of escape were
-provided by the very means which were making
-laws to hold and bind me more securely to slavery.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>By the laws of the state of Maryland, every free
-colored person was required to have what were
-called “free papers” which must be renewed frequently,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>and, of course, a fee was always charged
-for renewal. They contained a full and minute
-description of the holder, for the purpose of identification.
-This device, in some measure, defeated
-itself, since more than one man could be found to
-answer the general description; hence many slaves
-could get away by impersonating the real owners of
-these passes, which were returned by mail after the
-borrowers had made good their escape. To use
-these papers in this manner was hazardous both for
-the fugitives and for the lenders. Not every freeman
-was willing to put in jeopardy his own liberty
-that another might be free. It was, however,
-often done and the confidence that it necessitated
-was seldom betrayed. Douglass had not many
-friends among the free colored people in Baltimore
-who resembled him sufficiently to make it safe for
-him to use their papers. Fortunately, however, he
-had one who owned a “sailor’s protection,” a document
-describing the holder and certifying to the
-fact that he was a “free American sailor.” This
-“protection” did not describe its bearer very
-accurately. But, it called for a man very much
-darker than himself, and a close examination would
-have betrayed him at the start. In the face of all
-these conditions young Douglass was relying upon
-something beside a dubious written passport. This
-something was his desperate courage. He had
-learned to act the part of a freeman so well that
-no one suspected him of being a slave. He had
-early acquired the habit of studying human nature.
-As he grew to understand men, he no longer
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>dreaded them. No one knew better than he the
-kind of human nature that he had to deal with in
-this perilous undertaking. He knew the speech,
-manner, and behavior that would excite suspicion;
-hence he avoided asking for a ticket at the
-railway station because this would subject him to
-examination. He so managed that just as the train
-started he jumped on, his bag being thrown after
-him by some one in waiting. He knew that scrutiny
-of him in a crowded car <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">en route</span></i> would be
-less exacting than at the station. He had borrowed
-a sailor’s shirt, tarpaulin, cap and black cravat,
-tied in true sailor fashion, and he acted the part
-of an “old salt” so perfectly that he excited no
-suspicion. When the conductor came to collect
-his fare and inspected his “free papers,” Douglass,
-in the most natural manner, said that he had none
-but promptly showed his “sailor’s protection,”
-which the railway official merely glanced at and
-passed on without further question. Twice on the
-trip he thought he was detected. Once when his
-car stood opposite a south-bound train, Douglass
-observed a well-known citizen of Baltimore who
-knew him well, sitting where he could see him
-distinctly. At another time, while still in Maryland,
-he was noticed by a man who had met him
-frequently at the ship-yards. In neither of these
-cases, however, was he interfered with or molested.
-When he got into the free state of Pennsylvania,
-he felt more joy than he dared express. He had
-by his cool temerity and address passed every sentinel
-undetected and no slave, to his knowledge,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>he afterward said, ever got away from bondage on
-so narrow a margin of safety.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>After reaching Philadelphia, he hurried on to
-New York. It took him just twenty-four hours to
-make the run from the slave city of Baltimore to
-the free city of New York. Measured by his intense
-anxiety, the distance and time must have
-seemed without end. For fifteen years he had been
-patiently planning to get his feet upon free soil and
-breathe the air of a free state. No one ever did
-more to free himself or to deserve the liberty into
-which he was now about to enter. He came to New
-York, his pulses throbbing with high hopes. He
-soon learned, however, that his stay there was not
-safe and that the slave-traders plied their vocation
-even in the free-states.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Douglass’s instinct for right action seldom failed
-him. Although he was totally ignorant of New
-York and its people, and had never heard of a
-“Vigilance Committee,” he had managed, in a few
-days after his arrival, to put himself under the
-protection and guidance of such influential friends
-of the Negro race as Lewis and Arthur Tappan,
-Thomas Downing, and Theodore Wright, who were
-at that time high officials in that extensive Underground
-Railway system which had already safely
-carried thousands of passengers from bondage to
-freedom.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>He retained a keen remembrance of his former
-experiences in Baltimore and was conscious of a
-sense of protection in his Abolition friends; yet at
-the age of twenty-one years, in this new environment
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>of freedom, he was in many respects as ignorant
-as a child. To what was north, or east, or
-west of New York, he was entirely oblivious neither
-did he know the kind and the condition of the
-people among whom he was to live and work out
-his destiny. Where to go, what to do, and how to
-use his freedom, were questions he could ask, but
-could not answer. It was enough, now, just to
-know that he was free. What was to be his relationship
-to these non-slave-holding people was yet
-to be discovered.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>It is an evidence of his self-reliance and honor, as
-well as his loyalty to his past, that, almost the first
-step in his new life, was to send for his promised
-wife. She came to New York at once, and they
-were wedded by Rev. J. W. C. Pennington, a Presbyterian
-minister of that city. The early marriage
-of the young man must be regarded as an important
-event in his career as a freeman. It was a marriage
-for love and, as his wife was a woman of strong
-character and determination, she was able actively
-to assist her husband while he was seeking to establish
-himself in a new country. The act also
-made him at once a home-builder and the head of a
-family. Though he was poor almost to the very
-limit of poverty, without work, without habitation,
-and without friends or relationships, having nothing,
-in fact, but himself, which included a sound
-body and strong will, he went about planning and
-doing things as if certain that all must come out as
-he wished.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>His newly discovered friends decided it was best
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>for him not to stay longer in New York, and that
-New Bedford, Mass., was a much safer place. There
-he could work at his trade without danger of re-capture.
-He cheerfully started on his journey,
-though he had not enough money to pay his way.
-The stage-driver, plying between Newport and New
-Bedford, held a part of his baggage as security for
-his unpaid passage and when he and his wife arrived
-at their destination they had nothing to live
-on except faith. In this New England town everything
-was strange to Douglass, but he was not long
-in finding a friend, a colored man named Nathan
-Johnson. The latter, the first important acquaintance
-the refugee made among Northern colored people,
-had a good home, good standing in the community,
-and more than ordinary intelligence. He
-very soon discovered that Frederick Douglass was
-a man of superior fibre and became his firm friend.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Johnson’s house was well furnished with books
-and music, and bore other evidences of good taste
-and a cultivated mind. He was in a position to
-render just that kind of help which the young fugitive
-and his new wife needed at this time. He at
-once redeemed the baggage held by the stage-driver,
-and gave Douglass needed directions and advice as
-to how to get work and to establish himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Nathan Johnson had the further distinction of
-being the man who gave to the Maryland slave the
-name he ever afterward bore. Douglass left the
-South as Frederick Augustus Washington Bailey.
-His new-found friend had just been reading Scott’s
-<cite>Lady of the Lake</cite>, and persuaded the young man that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>Douglas was a name of poetic and historical significance;
-he was sure it would be further glorified
-by its new owner. With so auspicious a beginning,
-the refugee started out bravely to seek work and
-make a living for himself and his wife.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>As he moved about in the New England town, he
-was much impressed by Northern civilization, and
-was greatly surprised to see white people, who
-while rich, educated, and powerful, were yet not
-slave-holders. Up to this time he had known but
-two classes of white people, slave-holders and non-slave-holders.
-The non-slave-holding white people
-of the South, he knew, were generally ignorant,
-despised, and poor; while those who owned slaves
-seemed to own everything else worth having. Here
-in New England he observed that white people were
-high or low according to their character, ability, and
-possessions. Life appeared to him larger, wider,
-and fuller of possibilities than he had dreamed,
-even in his more hopeful days down on the Eastern
-Shore. These impressions and the better understanding
-of his own condition gave him courage
-and made him feel equal to any task or problem.
-His first occupation, as a free man, was putting
-away some coal for Ephraim Peabody, for which he
-was paid two dollars. He cherished this “free
-money,” for it was the first he had ever earned that
-he could call his own. He cheerfully went from
-one job to another, proud as a bank president in the
-new dignity which freedom seemed to have conferred
-upon him. He accepted any kind of task he could
-find to do, such as sawing wood, digging cellars,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>removing rubbish, helping to load cargoes on ships,
-scrubbing out ship cabins, and the rough work in a
-foundry. The employment was hard and the pay
-small, yet it did not seem so to this newly emancipated
-slave. The right to dispose of his own labor,
-and to have and to hold all that he made was a profound
-and unceasing satisfaction to him.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>His spare moments were given to studying and
-reading everything he could lay hold of. He
-saw from the first that his freedom could not be
-profitably used and protected without knowledge
-and the mental discipline that comes with the effort
-to acquire it. He was liked by everybody who employed
-him, because he made it a matter of principle
-to do all and more than his full duty in every
-occupation. He put as much zeal, intelligence, and
-cheerful industry into these common tasks as he
-later gave to pursuits of a more dignified character.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Young Douglass was cheered and heartened in this
-wholesome atmosphere of freedom,—free schools,
-free labor, and general fair play, to such a degree
-that it was a long time before he began to feel
-the presence and trammels of race prejudice as
-they existed in New Bedford and elsewhere in the
-North in that day. That there was a feeling against
-his color he learned when he attempted to follow
-his trade as a calker. When he sought to hire himself
-to a certain ship-owner at New Bedford, he was
-told to go to work, but when he went to the boat
-with his tools, the foreman informed him that every
-white man would quit if he struck a blow at his
-trade. This unexpected <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">dénouement</span></i> drove Douglass
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>back to common labor, at which he could earn less
-than one-half of what he could have made as a
-calker. He accepted the situation in good spirit,
-however, feeling that the worst possible treatment
-in freedom was infinitely better than slavery.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>He met his next rebuff when he attempted to attend
-one of the lectures under the auspices of the
-New Bedford Lyceum Association. He was refused
-a ticket on the ground that it was against the policy
-of the society to admit colored people to the lecture-room.
-It was not long, however, before this discrimination
-was done away with, since men like
-Charles Sumner, Emerson, Horace Mann, and Garrison,
-refused to speak before the organization unless
-the restriction was removed. The privilege of attending
-these meetings and hearing some of the great
-anti-slavery leaders was a matter of great import to
-Douglass. Indeed, it was the very thing he needed
-as a part of his education in preparation for his
-life work. He heard for the first time white men
-who were taking strong positions on the question of
-the abolition of slavery. The existence of an anti-slavery
-society and an anti-slavery movement of
-ever-widening extent and influence in the nation
-impressed him as nothing had done since he came
-from the South. The things for which he had
-secretly dreamed and yearned and struggled in
-Maryland were now becoming great national issues,
-with men of might behind them, pushing them on
-and seeking to make them the foremost questions
-of the day.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Quite as important as the privilege of hearing
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>slavery discussed was the chance he obtained of
-reading William Lloyd Garrison’s paper, <cite>The Liberator</cite>.
-Garrison’s direct and uncompromising
-words came to him like a trumpet call. He began
-to cherish each number as second only in importance
-to the Bible. Heretofore he had had no one
-to help him reason out the philosophy of the question.
-What the facts of slavery were he knew by
-actual and bitter suffering. The words of no one
-could make him feel their injustice and pain more
-than his own experiences had made him feel them,
-but here, behold, was a mighty man, a prophet in
-his moral earnestness—a sort of Isaiah, who with
-inspired fervor, predicted the ultimate downfall of
-slavery.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><cite>The Liberator</cite> and Mr. Garrison’s words were as
-important to young Douglass and his intellectual
-development as was the <cite>Columbian Orator</cite>, which
-had inspired him while a slave in Baltimore. Those
-who knew him at once recognized his intelligence.
-The colored people of New Bedford were the first
-to discover his fluency as a speaker and to give
-ear to his original ideas on the question of freedom
-for their race. He was often called upon to speak
-in meetings held by colored men in the town, and in
-colored churches. As far as the masses of the
-people were concerned, however, he was still an
-obscure Negro laborer. There was no one except,
-perhaps, Nathan Johnson, who saw in this patient
-and cheerful toiler the promise of a public career.
-No men of African descent had up to this time
-achieved anything like distinction. A colored man
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>might now and then be smart as a freak of nature;
-no one was prepared to think of his becoming
-great by sheer force of mind and character. But
-the power within this young fugitive slave and the
-forces without him were fast shaping themselves to
-call him forth and hold him up as an example to all
-the world.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER IV<br> <span class='large'>BEGINNING OF HIS PUBLIC CAREER</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c003'>Years had passed and great changes had taken
-place since Uncle Lawson, the old colored preacher,
-who had been Frederick Douglass’s first spiritual
-teacher and comforter, had solemnly told him that
-“the Lord had a great work for him to do,” and
-that he must prepare to do it. These words were
-spoken at a time when the boy was just beginning
-to awaken to the vast possibilities of human life,
-and, dimly conscious of his own powers, was groping
-to find his place in the world. Douglass had
-never forgotten this speech. It seemed now that
-the prophecy of the old colored man was to be fulfilled.
-During the first years at New Bedford, he
-had been industriously preparing himself to perform
-the task that destiny apparently had assigned
-him. He had no teachers to help him in
-his studies, or direct him in his reading. He had
-no definite notion of what the future had in store
-for him, nor of how he was to be used “to perform
-the great work,” of which Uncle Lawson had
-spoken. The latter believed that his young <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">protégé</span></i>
-was to become a preacher of the Gospel, because
-that seemed the only possible future of the slave
-upon whom unusual gifts had been bestowed.
-But Douglass had reached the conclusion that, if
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>any great work had been assigned him, it was in
-the direction of securing the freedom of the members
-of his race in bonds. He was faithfully preparing
-himself to meet the emergency that should
-call him into the service of that cause.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In the summer of 1841, the opportunity, long
-waited for, came. A great anti-slavery convention
-was called by William Lloyd Garrison and his
-friends, to meet at Nantucket. We have already
-seen how deeply young Douglass was impressed
-with Mr. Garrison’s writings in <cite>The Liberator</cite>, and
-it can be easily inferred that the word “anti-slavery”
-should have stirred him as no other word
-in the language of freedom. For the first time
-since he came to New Bedford he determined to
-take a holiday for the purpose of going to Nantucket
-and becoming as much as possible a part of
-the anti-slavery meeting. However ardent others
-might be in their interest for the convention, to
-him it meant everything worth living for and dying
-for to find the white people in a free community
-taking hold of the question of abolition as
-if their own kith and kin were in chains.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Douglass went to see, listen, and learn. This
-was privilege enough for one occasion. When he
-was sought out by a citizen of New Bedford, who
-had heard of him, and was asked to say a few
-words, he was quite startled. So frightened was
-he, “it was with much difficulty,” he says, “that I
-could stand erect or could command or articulate
-two words without hesitation and stammering. I
-trembled in every limb. I am not sure that my
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>embarrassment was not the most important part of
-my speech, if speech it could be called. The audience
-sympathized with me and at once, from having
-been remarkably silent, it became much excited.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>But his embarrassment soon subsided. Parker
-Pillsbury, an eye-witness, says: “When the young
-man, Douglass, closed late in the evening, none
-seemed to know or care for the lateness of the hour.
-The crowded congregation had been wrought up almost
-to enchantment as he turned over the terrible
-apocalypse of his experience in slavery.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>If Abolition was a great cause in the minds of
-those astonished auditors, it became more sincerely
-so after the young fugitive from bondage had concluded.
-William Lloyd Garrison followed, and of
-him Pillsbury says: “I think that Mr. Garrison
-never before, nor afterward felt more profoundly
-the sacredness of his mission. I surely never saw
-him more deeply and divinely inspired. He said
-among other things, ‘Have we been listening to a
-thing—a piece of property, or a man?’ ‘A man,’
-shouted the audience. ‘And should such a man be
-held a slave in a republican and Christian land?’
-‘No, no. Never, never!’ was the fervent response.
-‘Shall such a man be sent back to slavery
-from the soil of old Massachusetts?’ Almost the
-whole assembly sprang with one accord to their
-feet and shouted, ‘No, no!’ long and loud.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Measured by its effect on the audience and by
-its importance to himself and the Abolition cause,
-this first speech was one of the greatest Mr. Douglass
-ever made. Only three years out of bondage,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>never having been at school, wholly self-taught and
-coming direct from hard toil to a platform, he had
-been invited to speak before an audience of proud
-and cultured New Englanders!</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The whole thing seemed so incredible and was so
-unexpected that those who heard him never ceased
-to wonder how such wisdom and eloquence could
-come from a slave. It was by far the most dramatic
-and important incident that had occurred in
-the anti-slavery fight up to this time.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>William Lloyd Garrison was quick to discern
-that the cause needed this fugitive slave, more than
-any other man or thing, as an argument and an
-illustration in the further work of the anti-slavery
-society. Others spoke from knowledge and conviction
-gained by reading and study; Douglass spoke
-from twenty years’ experience of all the phases of
-slave-life. His words had the charm born of things
-seen, felt, and suffered. His presentation of the
-subject was more than argument; it was a transcript
-from actual life.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Immediately after the convention, John A. Collins,
-then the general agent of the Massachusetts
-Anti-Slavery Society, went to Mr. Douglass and
-urged him to accept a position as one of his assistants,
-publicly to advocate its principles. This unexpected
-offer was quite as embarrassing as was the
-request for him to speak at the meeting. Acting
-upon an impulse of self-mistrust, and a sense of
-unfitness, he tried to refuse, but all excuses were
-swept aside by Mr. Collins, and finally Douglass
-decided to make a trial for three months.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>After recovering from his first timidity, he entered
-the fight with enthusiasm. No one was more surprised
-than he at his ability to meet the expectations
-of the people. In the early part of his work he was
-accompanied by George Foster. They traveled and
-lectured from the same platform through the eastern
-counties of Massachusetts. He was frequently introduced
-to the audiences as a “chattel,” a “thing,”
-a “piece of property,” and Mr. Collins invariably
-called their attention to the fact that the speaker
-was a “graduate from an institution whose diploma
-was written upon his back.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>A great deal of interest was excited in the meetings
-that he was invited to address. Many of those who
-came out of curiosity to see and hear a fugitive slave
-went away convinced and converted to the anti-slavery
-cause. Douglass soon persuaded his friends
-and associates to think that he was too much of a
-man to be employed as a mere “exhibit.” At first
-his eloquence and success with the public both delighted
-and alarmed them. There began to arise a
-fear that his power as an orator would prove too
-great. It seemed well enough for him to tell the
-story of his servitude, but when he indulged in logic
-and flights of fancy and invective, it was feared that
-he would be considered an impostor. If slavery
-was such a degrading thing as this man said it was,
-the question naturally arose, How, then, did he acquire
-his accomplishments? Besides, Douglass did
-not give the name of his master, or the state from
-which he came.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>All this was true enough, and the truth was somewhat
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>embarrassing, but the people did not stop to
-consider the omission. Douglass was now a resident
-of Massachusetts; he was a slave, owned in Maryland.
-To state the facts about his identity would be
-to invite slave-catchers to New Bedford to reclaim
-strayed property. There was nothing for him to do
-but to keep the dangerous secret securely locked in
-his own bosom and talk down the doubts and suspicions
-that were now and then expressed. George
-Foster, Mr. Garrison, Mr. Collins, and other friends,
-who happened to be on the same platform with him,
-were always admonishing him not to appear too intelligent,
-too oratorical, or too logical, lest his claim
-of having been a slave be discredited. “Give the
-facts,” they said, “and we will take care of the philosophy.”
-“Let us have the facts only.” “Tell
-your story, Frederick; people will not believe you
-were ever a slave, if you go on in this way.” “Be
-yourself.” “Better have a little plantation dialect
-than not.” “It is not best that you should seem so
-learned.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Such were the complaints and warnings that came
-to him from those who most admired him, during
-the first few months of his career as an orator. The
-young man could scarcely curb his impatience, so
-great was his moral earnestness. The thoughts
-which he uttered flowed so spontaneously and uncontrollably
-from his lips, that it seemed to him he
-could no more limit himself than he could stop the
-force of gravitation. Speaking of this embarrassment
-he says: “It was impossible for me to repeat
-the same old story month after month and keep up
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>my interest in it. I could not follow the injunction
-of my friends, for I was now reading and thinking.
-New views of the subject were being presented to
-my mind: I could not always curb my moral indignation.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In order to remove all doubts as to whether he
-was a slave, he put the facts, including the name of
-his master, in the possession of the Anti-Slavery
-Society. As soon as Phillips and Garrison knew
-the truth, they advised him to go on as before, for
-if he gave his name and that of his master, he would
-be in danger of re-capture,—even in Massachusetts.
-When he showed to Wendell Phillips a manuscript
-detailing the facts of his slave-life, he was advised
-“to throw it in the fire”; but so straightforward
-and earnest and effective was his work, and so
-rapid his development as an orator, that he soon
-overcame all doubts, and those who had once urged
-him to curb his intellectual flights learned to admire
-his courage, and to put a higher value on his services
-to the cause of Abolition. Whenever there
-was serious work to be done, and the best men and
-women were needed to combat pro-slavery policies
-and measures, he was eagerly sought. His name now
-began to be announced with those of the foremost
-advocates of freedom.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In the latter part of the year 1841, and in the
-early months of 1842, the Abolitionists were called
-upon for a show of strength. The appeal came from
-Rhode Island. The people of that state were
-aroused to a high pitch of interest in an effort to
-adopt a new constitution in place of the old colonial
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>charter that had been in use since the Revolution.
-Making a new constitution was a political
-question and every political contest, however local
-in concern, afforded occasion for the pro-slavery and
-anti-slavery people to clash. In this Rhode Island
-contest, interest centred on the proposition to
-restrict the right of suffrage to white citizens only.
-The pro-slavery sentiment of this, as of other Northern
-states, was so strong, that there seemed to be a
-great likelihood of the “color line” being fixed in
-the supreme law of the commonwealth. To combat
-this danger, the anti-slavery societies massed
-their forces and went into the little state to dispute
-every inch of the ground. Stephen S. Foster, Parker
-Pillsbury, Abby Kelley, James Monroe, and Frederick
-Douglass were the advance guard. The contest
-here was somewhat different from the more or
-less peaceful work of holding public meetings in
-Massachusetts to create public opinion. Here was
-a clean-cut issue in which was involved the right
-of free Negroes to be full citizens in a Northern
-state. Under the leadership of Thomas W. Dorr,
-the pro-slavery forces had to be opposed by strong
-arguments and not by mere sentiment. There was
-also a decided feeling against “intermeddlers,” as
-Douglass and his associates were called. Meetings
-were held all over the state, and soon it was plain
-to be seen that the anti-slavery people were making
-progress in overcoming the “Dorrites.” It was a
-picturesque and dramatic campaign, the chief features
-of which were the conspicuous parts taken
-by Frederick Douglass, the fugitive slave, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>Abby Kelley. Mr. Douglass says that she “was
-perhaps the most successful of any of us. Her
-youth and simple Quaker beauty, combined with
-her wonderful earnestness, her large knowledge and
-great logical powers bore down all opposition to the
-end, wherever she spoke, though she was before
-pelted with foul eggs, and no less foul words, from
-the noisy mobs which attended us.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Mr. Douglass speaks in generous praise of the
-effectiveness of other anti-slavery advocates, who
-were associated with him in this campaign. He
-himself made a multitude of friends and added
-immensely to his prestige as an orator. He was
-received by many of the leading citizens of the
-state, almost as a brother. Among these new
-friends he gratefully mentions the Clarks, Keltons,
-Chases, Adamses, Greens, Eldridges, Mitchells, Anthonys,
-Goulds, Fairbanks, and many others.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Yet it was not all smooth sailing for the colored
-orator. He was frequently dragged from the cars
-by mobs, though his associates were always loyal
-to him, many of them refusing to go where he could
-not. This was especially the case with Wendell
-Phillips, James Monroe, and William A. White.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The result of the battle in Rhode Island was a
-complete triumph over those who had sought to
-abridge the suffrage. The victory was not only
-important, as a show of strength of the Abolitionists,
-but it prevented the establishment of a dangerous
-precedent which might have had its influence
-upon other states.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>From Rhode Island, Mr. Douglass was called to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>speak in various places. At first he was not always
-well received, but in nearly every case, after
-he had once appeared, converts were made and
-opposition ceased. At one time when he, with
-Garrison, Abby Kelley, and Foster, attempted to
-speak in Hartford, Conn., the doors of every hall
-and church were closed against them, but they
-spoke under the open sky, to so much effect that
-some of their opponents had the grace to confess
-to a sense of shame for such action.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>At Grafton, Mass., Douglass was advertised to
-speak alone. There was no house, church, or
-market-place in which he was permitted to appear.
-Not to be outdone, he went up and down
-the streets ringing a dinner-bell that he had borrowed,
-announcing that “Frederick Douglass,
-recently a slave, will lecture on Grafton Common
-this evening at seven o’clock.” As a result of this
-notice, he spoke to a great concourse of people,
-and as usual advanced the cause of Abolition.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In the year 1843, the movement had so far progressed
-that a great undertaking was announced.
-It was proposed to hold one hundred conventions
-under the auspices of the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery
-Society in such states as New Hampshire, Vermont,
-New York, Ohio, Indiana, and Pennsylvania.
-Mr. Douglass was selected as one of the
-agents to assist in the work. This was regarded
-as an ambitious scheme on the part of Mr. Garrison,
-and attracted a great deal of public attention.
-Among the speakers associated with Mr.
-Douglass in this tour were George Bradburn,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>John A. Collins, James Monroe, Sidney Howard
-Gay, and Charles Lennox Remond, the last-named a
-colored man of unusual eloquence.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Mr. Douglass felt very proud, as well he might,
-of being given so prominent a part in this important
-enterprise, and of being associated with men of such
-distinction. The wisdom of holding these conventions
-was soon made manifest, when it was discovered
-how ill-informed were the masses of the people
-as to the nature of the issue the Abolitionists were
-seeking to force upon the attention of the country.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The crusade received rather a chilly reception in
-the Green Mountain State. Along the Erie Canal,
-from Albany to Buffalo, it was more than difficult
-to excite any interest or to make converts. In
-Syracuse, the home of Rev. Samuel J. May, and
-where such men as Gerrit Smith, Beriah Green, and
-William Goodell lived, Douglass and his friends
-could not obtain a hall, church, or market-place to
-hold a meeting. Everybody was discouraged and
-favored “shaking the dust from off their feet,” and
-going to other parts. But Frederick Douglass did
-not believe in surrender. He was determined to
-speak his word for the gospel of Abolition here,
-even if he must do so under the open sky, as in
-Connecticut and Massachusetts. In the morning
-he began in a grove with five people present. So
-powerful was his appeal that in the afternoon he
-had an audience of five hundred and in the evening
-he was tendered the use of an old building that had
-done service as a Congregational church. In this
-house the convention was organized and carried on
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>for three days. The seeds of Abolition were so well
-sown in Syracuse, that thereafter it was always
-hospitable ground for anti-slavery advocates. Mr.
-Douglass had a more friendly reception in Rochester,
-which was to be his future home. Here he found a
-goodly number of Abolitionists and his words made
-a lasting impression.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The next meeting of importance was in Buffalo.
-The outlook for a convention in this western New
-York city was so discouraging that Mr. Douglass’s
-associates turned on their heels and left him to “do
-Buffalo alone.” The place appointed was a dilapidated
-old room that had once been used as a post-office.
-No one was there at first except a few hack-drivers
-who sauntered in from curiosity. But Mr.
-Douglass went at them with great earnestness, as if
-they could settle all the problems that were overburdening
-his heart. Out of this small and unsympathetic
-beginning, grew a great convention. Every
-day for nearly a week, in the old building, he spoke
-to constantly increasing crowds of people who were
-worth talking to, until finally a large Baptist church
-was thrown open to him. Here the size and character
-of the audience were flattering. So great was
-the eagerness to hear him that on Sunday evening
-he addressed an outdoor meeting of five thousand
-people in the park.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>At this Buffalo meeting Mr. Douglass called to
-his assistance a number of prominent colored
-speakers, such as Henry Highland Garnet, Theodore
-S. Wright, Amos G. Bearman, Charles M. Ray, and
-Charles Lennox Remond, all of powerful speech and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>growing influence, who held a convention of their
-own, at which the ex-slave made an eloquent address.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>From this city Douglass continued on his way into
-Ohio and Indiana. The Ohio meeting, held in
-Clinton County, was a notable event. This was the
-farthest west Mr. Douglass had been as yet and he
-now went into the state of Indiana. This was dangerous
-ground, as he soon learned when he attempted
-to deliver his message. Here he found a
-mob-spirit harder to resist than any he had encountered
-in the East. In attempting to speak at
-Richmond, Ind., where Henry Clay had been heard
-shortly before, he received a shower of “evil-smelling
-eggs.” From this place he went to Pendleton,
-where he could find no hall or church in which to
-speak; but, not to be outdone, he attempted what
-he had successfully accomplished at Syracuse, and
-at other places. He had a platform erected in the
-woods. A large assembly of people came out to
-hear the colored orator, but the Hoosiers, in this
-part of the state, were determined not to be persuaded.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>It was, as one of them rudely expressed it, a case
-of “no nigger speaker for us.” As soon as the
-meeting began, a mob of fifty or sixty rough-looking
-men ordered Douglass to stop. An attempt to disregard
-this threatening command, maddened the
-rioters. They tore down the platform and violently
-assaulted the orator and his associate, Mr. White.
-Seeing the danger, Douglass began to fight his way
-through the crowd with a club. The sight of a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>weapon in the hands of a Negro angered the mob
-still more, and they set upon him with such fury
-that he was felled to the ground, being beaten so
-fiercely that he was left for dead. Having dispersed
-the meeting, the men mounted their horses and rode
-away. Mr. Douglass’s right hand was broken, and
-he was in a state of unconsciousness for some time.
-He was unable to speak for several days, being tenderly
-cared for by a Mrs. Neal Hardy, a member
-of the Society of Friends, until his wounds were
-healed, but he never recovered the full use of his
-right hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Notwithstanding this rough treatment, Mr. Douglass
-would not allow himself to be frightened out of
-the state. He continued his work for a long time,
-and compelled a respectful and peaceful hearing.
-He was no coward and was not afraid of mobs. He
-did not stop until, according to the plans determined
-upon by the Anti-Slavery Society of Massachusetts,
-the one hundred conventions had been held. The
-work was accomplished, in spite of indifference,
-contemptuous criticism, and sometimes violent and
-bloody opposition.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Although it seemed at the time that not much
-had been achieved, the seed sown was to bear fruit
-when a few years later the South and North were
-arrayed against each other in the great struggle for
-the preservation of the Union.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER V<br> <span class='large'>SLAVERY AND ANTI-SLAVERY</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c003'>Frederick Douglass was so much a part of
-the Abolition movement from 1838 to the final
-overthrow of slavery in the United States, that his
-career will be the better understood after a brief review
-of the condition of the country as affected by
-the evil during those years.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>At the time of Douglass’s escape from bondage
-in 1838, slavery was the one great and overshadowing
-fact in our national life. According to the
-census of 1840, the number of slaves in the United
-States was about 2,500,000 and the number of
-free colored people about 300,000. The value of
-slave-property was upward of two billions of dollars.
-No other interest in the United States at
-that time approximated in the amount of its invested
-capital the sum represented in these human
-chattels. The labor of these slaves was to a very
-considerable extent the basis of American commerce
-and credit. Not the South alone, but the entire
-nation, was interested directly or indirectly, in
-preserving the integrity and maintaining the economic
-value of slave-labor. The mining, the manufacturing,
-and the great grain interests of the present
-time were unknown and scarcely dreamed of in
-those early days of the nation’s industries. Cotton
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>was “king,” and its dominion affected in some
-way, and to some degree, the social, political, and
-economic life of the republic.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The results of Whitney’s invention of the cotton
-gin were such as to check the current of sentiment
-in favor of emancipation, which had found expression
-in the sayings of Thomas Jefferson, Madison,
-and other Revolutionary leaders. In his great
-speech of March 7, 1850, Daniel Webster said: “In
-1791 the first parcel of cotton of the growth of the
-United States was exported and amounted to 19,200
-pounds. It has gone on increasing rapidly until
-the whole crop may now, perhaps, in a season of
-great product and great prices, amount to $100,000,000.”
-According to the estimates of the United
-States Census Bureau in its census of 1900, cotton
-production increased from 2,000,025 pounds in 1790
-to 987,637,200 pounds in 1849, and 2,397,238,140
-pounds in 1859. The enormous capital invested in
-this industry created a close community of interest
-between the planters of the South and the capitalists
-of the North; hence the influence of the cotton
-trade was felt in both sections.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>This enormous interest easily dominated the
-politics of the times, North and South. The most
-prominent statesmen of the nation, after 1850, were
-either openly committed to policies and measures to
-protect and extend the power of slavery, or were
-silent, since to oppose these policies and measures
-meant, in many instances, political extinction. The
-trend of all legislation in our national government
-at this period was directly opposed to emancipation.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>Meanwhile, the evil flourished and became more and
-more a part of the spirit and blood of our national
-life. If there were no slavery in the Northern
-states, one reason was that slave-labor had proven
-unprofitable. In the early days of the institution,
-the North was quite as willing to legalize and protect
-slavery as the South, and continued to do so as
-long as it paid and was practicable. The mere
-fact that slavery was profitable where climatic conditions
-were congenial to cotton raising, increased
-the demand for both slaves and territory. The pressure
-for more slaves and more territory for slavery,
-was so persistent, that it constantly became easier to
-ignore moral and religious precepts, to set aside the
-national maxims, and to override the laws that
-stood in the way of its extension and power. For
-example, the slave-trade was prohibited by national
-law, yet so little effort was made to enforce this law,
-that importations kept the market well supplied.
-The acts of Congress, the messages of our presidents,
-the utterances of our cabinet ministers, and
-correspondence with the representatives of the
-nation at foreign courts, contain abundant evidences
-of the constant concern of our government that
-nothing should be done to impair the security of
-slave-property in the United States. The acts of
-Congress by which every addition to our national
-domain south of the Ohio River became slave-territory,
-clearly show this. When in 1855, a “slaver”
-was driven by storm to seek refuge in Bermuda, our
-Minister at the Court of St. James was instructed
-that, “in the present state of diplomatic relations
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>with the government of his British Majesty, the
-most immediately pressing of the matters with
-which the United States Legation at London is now
-charged, is the claim of certain American citizens
-against Great Britain, for a number of slaves
-wrecked on the island in the Atlantic.” The message
-contains a polite hint that “neglect to satisfy
-these demands might possibly tend to disturb and
-weaken the kind and amicable relations that now so
-happily subsist between the two countries.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>By sanction of the national government, slavery
-was legalized and protected at the national capital.
-The war with Mexico, which resulted in the annexation
-of Texas, was followed by the establishment of
-slavery in the territory so acquired. It was fostered
-and defended as a national institution not only
-by numerous acts of the government, but by public
-sentiment in the Northern states. It had existed
-before the foundation of the Union. It had been
-accepted as a fact by the framers of the Constitution.
-As such, it had a legitimate claim, it was
-urged, to the protection of the government. It was
-generally assumed that, on the whole, the Negro
-was better off in slavery than as a free man.
-Though the Northern people did not favor the extension
-of slavery, they were disposed to meet in a
-spirit of conciliation every demand for more protection,
-more power, and more territory for this traffic.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>When opposition, not on grounds of expediency
-but of fundamental right, began to manifest itself in
-Northern states by the circulation of Abolition
-papers, the alarm of slave-owners was expressed in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>no uncertain tones. Some of the governors of slave-states
-and their legislatures made urgent demands
-that such publications be suppressed. The following
-is a sample of some of the resolutions passed by
-the legislatures: “Resolved that our sister states
-are respectfully requested to enact penal laws prohibiting
-the printing, within their respective limits,
-of all such publications as may have a tendency
-to make our slaves discontented.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The messages of the governors of two Northern
-states, William L. Marcy of New York, and Edward
-Everett of Massachusetts, aptly illustrate sentiment
-in the North at this time. Governor Marcy said:
-“Without the power to pass such laws, the states
-would not possess all the necessary means for preserving
-their external relations of peace among themselves.”
-Governor Everett said: “Whatever by
-direct and necessary operation is calculated to excite
-an insurrection among slaves, has been held by
-highly respectable legal authority an offense against
-the peace of this commonwealth, which may be
-prosecuted as a misdemeanor at common law.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In the same year, 1836, the Rhode Island legislature
-reported on a bill in conformity with the demands
-of the slave-states. The significance of this
-action is that it was taken fully two months prior to
-the request of the Southern states. Thus it appears
-that the idea of the suppression of free speech and
-free publication against slavery was first broached
-in a Northern state.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>President Jackson, in his annual message to Congress,
-in 1835 suggested “the propriety of passing
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>such laws as will prohibit, under severe penalties,
-the circulation in the Southern states, through the
-mail, of incendiary publications, intended to instigate
-the slaves to insurrection.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The Postmaster-General, a Northern man, serving
-under Jackson, refused to “sanction” or condemn
-the acts of certain postmasters in arresting the circulation
-of Abolition circulars, characterized as
-“incendiary matter.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The state of public feeling at this time fully justified
-the government and its officials in everything
-they did to protect slavery, since their action was
-sanctioned by a sentiment national in extent and
-character. Just how strong was this public opinion
-in the North may be further illustrated by the spirit
-of mob-violence that forms one of the darkest chapters
-in the struggle to make this country, in deed as
-well as in name, “the home of the free.” William
-Lloyd Garrison and Benjamin Lundy, were repeatedly
-assaulted while they were running a paper
-in Baltimore in 1827. The gentle and pious young
-Quakeress, Prudence Crandall, of Canterbury, Conn.,
-was arrested and sent to jail for allowing colored
-children to attend her school. Her brother, Dr.
-Reuben Crandall, was arrested in the city of Washington,
-thrown into prison on August 11, 1833, and
-held there for eight months on the charge of circulating
-incendiary publications with the intent of
-inciting slaves to insurrection. The only evidence
-against him was that he had in his trunk some anti-slavery
-circulars. He died from the effects of his
-imprisonment soon after his release.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>On the 4th day of July, 1834, an anti-slavery
-meeting in New York was made the occasion of a
-frightful riot. At Worcester, Mass., in 1835, an
-anti-slavery speaker, Rev. O. Scott, son of an ex-governor,
-was forcibly prevented from delivering a
-lecture, and his notes were torn up. On the same
-day at Canaan, N. H., an academy was demolished,
-for the reason that it was designed for the instruction
-of colored youth. At Boston, on October 21, 1835,
-a mob of “five thousand gentlemen” attacked the
-Boston Female Anti-Slavery Society and dispersed
-one of its meetings while its president was at prayers.
-At Syracuse, N. Y., in October, 1833, a crowd of
-“prominent” citizens broke up a meeting called by
-Gerrit Smith to form an anti-slavery society; and
-in December, 1836, an anti-slavery meeting at New
-Haven, Conn., was dispersed by students of Yale
-College. At Alton, Ill., on the 7th day of November,
-1837, Rev. Elijah P. Lovejoy was shot and killed
-and his printing press destroyed by a mob. At
-Cincinnati, O., in 1836, and again in 1840, mobs of
-citizens demolished the printing press of the <cite>Philanthropist</cite>,
-owned by James G. Birney, an ex-slave-holder
-from Kentucky. Pennsylvania Hall, in
-Philadelphia, built for the free discussion of all
-questions interesting to the American people, was
-burned by a mob in May, 1838, because Abolitionists
-had been allowed to hold a meeting there.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>But what was perhaps the most heartless of all
-instances of violence occurred on the 1st of August,
-1842, at Philadelphia. The colored people of that
-city had built a fine church and hall in which they
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>were holding a temperance celebration on the day
-of the anniversary of British emancipation. A mob
-was formed which burned the building, demolished
-the homes of the participants, and in a most savage
-and brutal manner, beat and maltreated its innocent
-victims. This riot lasted two days and the city
-authorities offered but feeble protection.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Many other incidents of violence directed against
-attempts to discuss the slavery question might be recited,
-but enough have been mentioned to indicate
-public feeling in almost every community in the
-non-slave-holding States. All these manifestations
-of opposition to anti-slavery agitation and action
-were at first and for a long time very generally sanctioned
-by the churches, the schools and colleges,
-and by the politicians of the free North. All the
-forces of conservatism in the country were, as might
-have been expected, in favor of preserving the <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">status
-quo</span></i>, and scarcely any cause in the whole history of
-our country has ever been so unpopular as this
-Abolition movement. It seemed that the slave-holders
-might rest perfectly secure in the assurance
-that their interests would be well guarded by their
-friends in the free-states, assisted by the natural
-inertia of the great mass of the Northern people,
-who were instinctively opposed to any sudden or
-violent change such as the agitation of the Abolitionists
-seemed to portend.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The inherent weakness of slavery in this country
-appeared when the very laws that were passed to
-sustain and support it served merely to arouse the
-public to a real comprehension of its evils. Gradually
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>it became clear to an ever-increasing number
-of citizens that it had no place in a republic. It
-was out of harmony with the doctrines and principles
-fought for in the Revolutionary War, and it
-did violence to the consciences of large numbers of
-men and women, North and South, who, uncontrolled
-by prejudice, were free to think and act for
-themselves. Thousands of Southern people who
-felt that slavery was a wrong, emancipated their
-slaves; others were moved to treat them with unusual
-kindness, and still others held them because
-they could not help themselves.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Many influences were at work to arouse and
-quicken the moral sense of the public and to make it
-conscious of the issues involved in the question.
-Such agencies as the missionary movement, in its
-effort to “evangelize” the world; the work of the
-Bible, tract and educational societies, the religious
-awakening of the masses, in response to the
-appeals of such eloquent preachers as Beecher,
-Rice, and Summerfield; and the new interest in the
-former teachings of Hopkins and Edwards:—all
-these forces, along with the new enthusiasm for
-social and political reform, which found expression
-in the work of temperance and peace societies and
-the fight against the cruel treatment of the Indians,
-especially the Cherokees, aroused the people and
-prepared them to take part in the discussion of
-public questions, giving them a new sense of the
-significance and the responsibility of self-government.
-This revived public spirit was aided and
-advanced by the growing influence of the modern
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>newspaper press, and of journals dealing with a
-variety of subjects other than politics. Each
-moral and social question came to have an organ to
-spread its views. Every one who had a gift for
-writing had the opportunity to impress his opinions
-upon the public, if he could but get hold of a press
-and printing outfit. A noted author of that period
-says: “No one can comprehend in their real and
-distinctive characteristics, the existing agitations of
-America, if he does not take into account the new
-power and changed direction of the public press
-constituting a new era in human history.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>With these agencies for the education of the
-masses, there came into being the lecture platform.
-Any man or woman with a talent for fluent speech
-and a “cause,” was at liberty to take the rostrum
-and attempt to get a hearing. The same writer,
-above quoted, says: “The railway car of 1838,
-and the electric telegraph ten years after, were
-scarcely greater innovations or greater curiosities
-than were the voluntary lectures, free public conventions,
-and the moral and religious weekly journals
-with their correspondence from 1825 to 1830.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The development of these moral and religious
-agencies furnished the masses of the American
-people with the means of creating a more active interest
-in public affairs. Out of these grew that
-broader knowledge and more acute moral sense
-which led them to inquire into the sanctions that
-seemed to hedge about and protect the institution
-of slavery.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>It was in such an atmosphere, in which religious
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>enthusiasm touched and quickened the sense of responsibility
-of the people in social and political
-conditions, that the Abolition spirit grew and became
-a power in public affairs. The question of
-slavery was definitely put before the people as a
-political issue in the Missouri Compromise in 1820.
-During the debate that followed they heard for the
-first time, the doctrine of “immediate and unconditional
-emancipation of the slave.” Interest in
-this new and radical doctrine was immediate and
-wide-spread. To those who owned slaves, and
-indeed to the vast majority of the people, North
-and South, who accepted slavery as an established
-institution with a legitimate claim to protection
-from attack, this new doctrine seemed at once revolutionary
-and dangerous.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The cry at once went up, “Put down the discussion
-and silence the agitation!” It was indeed a
-question that could not survive debate. As a matter
-of fact, the opposition which Abolition aroused
-was the one thing that insured its final triumph.
-Men felt instinctively—it was the republican habit
-of mind—that there must be something essentially
-unsound in a system that could not tolerate open
-and free discussion. Hence it was that every attempt
-to suppress the agitation defeated its own
-purposes. The characters who now began to push
-to the front in the ranks of the Abolitionists were
-men of stern American fibre. Facts, figures, and
-arguments began to pile up which showed that this
-country could not long exist “half-slave and half-free.”
-The terms “pro-slavery” and “anti-slavery”
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>came into the vocabulary of political discussion
-during this new conflict. The breach between
-the forces represented by these names grew
-wider and wider as the strife continued. The
-very nature of the issue caused a degree of bitterness
-that has never before or since been equaled
-in political argument in the United States. There
-could be no such thing as compromise. A test of
-moral and physical strength was sooner or later
-inevitable.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The issues of the contest may be summarized with
-advantage.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c015'><span class='sc'>Pro-Slavery</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>The powers and privileges the conservative party
-sought to maintain and defend were:</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The unlimited authority of the master or owner
-of slaves.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Abrogation of marriage and the family relation
-among slaves.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The power to enforce labor without wages.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Incapacity of the slaves to acquire and hold
-property.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Incapacity to enjoy civil, domestic, and political
-rights.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Incapacity to make contracts or bargains.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The liability of the slave to be sold like other
-chattels, and separated from relatives.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The authorized prosecution of the inter-state
-slave-trade.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The power of the master to forbid education, and
-to permit religious gatherings at his own discretion.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>The power of the legislatures of slave-states to
-prohibit education of slaves by their masters.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c015'><span class='sc'>Anti-Slavery</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>The principles for which the Abolitionists contended
-were the following:</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>All men are created equal and are endowed by
-their Creator with certain inalienable rights among
-which are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Slavery, or more properly, the practice of slave-holding,
-is a crime against human nature and a sin
-against God.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Like all other sins, slavery should be abolished
-unconditionally, repented of, and abandoned. It
-is always safe to leave off doing wrong and never
-safe to continue in wrong-doing.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>It is the duty of all men to bear testimony against
-wrong-doing, and consequently to bear testimony
-against slave-holding.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Immediate and unconditional emancipation, is
-preëminently safe and beneficial to all parties
-concerned.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>No compensation is due to the slave-holder for
-emancipating his slaves; and emancipation creates
-no necessity for such compensation because it is of
-itself a pecuniary benefit, not only to slaves, but
-to masters.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>There should be no compromise in legislation,
-jurisprudence, or the executive action of the government,
-any more than in the activities and responsibilities
-of private life.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span>No wicked enactments can be morally binding.
-There are at the present time the highest obligations
-resting upon the people of the free-states to
-remove slavery, by moral and political action, as
-prescribed in the Constitution of the United
-States.<a id='r1'></a><a href='#f1' class='c017'><sup>[1]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f1'>
-<p class='c004'><a href='#r1'>1</a>. See William Lloyd Garrison—“The Story of His Life Told
-by His Children,” vol. 1, p. 408, <em>et. seq.</em>, where the full text
-of the Declaration of Sentiments of the Anti-Slavery Convention
-of 1833 is given.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c004'>Societies were formed on all sides. On the 10th
-day of January, 1832, the New England Anti-Slavery
-Society was established in Boston. In 1833,
-another society was organized in New York City.
-A call was issued for a national anti-slavery convention,
-to be held in Philadelphia, December 4th,
-5th, and 6th, in 1833, for the purpose of forming
-a National Anti-Slavery Society. Upward of sixty
-delegates came to this meeting from Maine, New
-Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island,
-Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania,
-and Ohio. This was the beginning of the
-national anti-slavery movement. Arthur Tappan,
-a well-known merchant of New York City, was
-chosen president. Among the delegates in attendance
-were such distinguished men as John G.
-Whittier, the poet; Beriah Green, William Lloyd
-Garrison, Elizur Wright, A. L. Cox, and William
-Goodell. After this time anti-slavery societies
-were formed in every Northern state, men and
-women alike being eligible to membership.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The Quaker element in this anti-slavery movement
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_97'>97</span>was strong and important. Benjamin Lundy
-was the pioneer Abolitionist and no single American
-ever did more for emancipation. In an appeal
-to the public in 1830, he said: “In a period of ten
-years prior to 1830, I have sacrificed several thousand
-dollars of my own hard earnings; have traveled
-upward of five thousand miles on foot and
-more than twenty thousand miles in other ways;
-have visited nineteen states of this Union and held
-more than two hundred public meetings, and have
-performed two voyages to the West Indies, by
-which means the liberation of a considerable number
-of slaves has been effected.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The anti-slavery movement was a warfare, but
-its weapons were those of peace. Appeal to the
-people by public addresses and through the medium
-of the press, constituted the only method of fighting.
-Agitators in behalf of this cause flooded the
-country with facts, figures, and arguments. They
-brought the republic back to the principles of liberty
-and justice upon which it was founded. They
-urged this issue so persistently that no other question
-was permitted to equal it in public interest.
-They set out with the determination that there
-was to be no peace, no ease of conscience, no
-further prosperity, no national glory until this
-question of slavery was settled and settled right.
-As the subject grew in interest and importance, it
-attracted to itself some of the brightest minds of
-the country; men who afterward became distinguished
-as statesmen, poets, authors, orators.
-Even men of wealth, whose natural interest would
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_98'>98</span>have inclined them to aid in preserving existing
-conditions, joined the ranks. They gave to the
-movement a character for respectability and made
-it a power that must be reckoned with. The new
-party demanded a new dispensation, and with such
-persistency, upon grounds which appealed so directly
-to the fundamental political beliefs of the
-people, that finally there was not enough inertia in
-the nation to oppose its demands.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>While these revolutionary forces were gathering
-strength, the great mass of the Negro people in
-the United States were dumb. In the plantation
-states, the black man was a chattel; in the Northern
-states, he was a good deal of an outlaw.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>He was not permitted to share in the responsibilities
-and benefits of citizenship sufficiently to be
-able to make his abilities known and his purposes
-respected. “A man without force,” to use Mr.
-Douglass’s words, “is without the essential dignity
-of humanity. Human nature is so constituted that
-it cannot honor a helpless man, though it can pity
-him, and even this it cannot do long, if signs of
-power do not arise; you can put a man so far
-beneath the level of his kind that he loses all
-just ideals of his natural position.”</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_99'>99</span>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER VI<br> <span class='large'>SEEKS REFUGE IN ENGLAND</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c003'>When Frederick Douglass had concluded his remarkable
-tour from Vermont to Indiana in the interest
-of the anti-slavery conventions, he was one of
-the most popular and widely talked of men on the
-American platform. The public everywhere was
-eager to learn everything possible about the “runaway
-slave” who was winning his place among the
-foremost of American orators. Interest in him was
-farther enhanced by the publication of his “Narrative,”
-in 1845. Its issue was made necessary by
-the demand for something definite concerning the
-antecedents of this “alleged slave.” His accomplishments
-as a speaker and as a reasoner seemed inconsistent
-with the representation made by him, that
-he had had no schooling, and that he had been a
-slave until he was twenty-one years of age. There
-was a desire for the exact facts. Yet to give them
-was dangerous. His growing popularity was likewise
-a peril. The possibility of his capture and return
-to slavery increased with his influence as an
-orator and agitator.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>After this publication, Douglass’s personal friends
-and the leaders of the anti-slavery cause became
-more and more apprehensive. It would have been
-regarded as little less than a calamity to have had
-Frederick Douglass, the incomparable orator, the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_100'>100</span>man in whom almost for the first time, the silent,
-toiling slaves had found a voice, dragged back into
-bondage. Under the circumstances it was deemed
-expedient for him to go to England. Douglass himself
-was less anxious than his associates. He was
-willing to continue to run any risk, if thereby he
-might serve the cause of emancipation. His objections,
-however, were overruled, and he was obliged
-to depart. He sailed on the steamer <em>Cambria</em> of the
-Cunard Line, Saturday, August 16, 1845, and James
-N. Buffum, of Lynn, Mass., accompanied him.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Though an English boat, Douglass was not
-allowed cabin accommodations upon it. This
-aroused the indignation of a large number of the
-passengers, among whom were many anti-slavery
-people,—notably the Hutchinson family, the sweet
-singers of the Abolition cause. Mr. Douglass by
-this time had become so used to such humiliations
-that he easily made himself at home in the steerage.
-Within a few days, however, he was the most popular
-person on the boat. Cabin passengers came into
-his dirty quarters to see and talk with him. And
-presently all restrictions were removed and he was
-welcomed and honored in every part of the great
-steamer. A short speech which he delivered <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">en
-route</span></i> aroused the resentment of some who were on the
-ship and a group of young men threatened to throw
-him overboard. It was only by the interference of
-the captain that Mr. Douglass was saved from
-violence. On reaching Liverpool Thursday, August
-28, 1845, these young men attempted to forestall
-any possible influence he might try to exert, by
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_101'>101</span>the publication of statements derogatory to his
-character and standing; but such statements, instead
-of having the desired effect, served but to
-arouse great interest in him.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In going to Great Britain, Mr. Douglass had no
-fixed plan or program. He was merely fleeing to a
-land of safety to escape capture and a return into
-slavery. He soon found, however, that he was almost
-as well-known in England, as he was in New
-England. The remarkable story of his life had
-been widely read by the British public, especially by
-those interested in the anti-slavery cause. They
-had just passed through an anti-slavery agitation
-which had resulted in emancipation in the West
-Indies. Many of the most distinguished men in
-public life in Great Britain were Abolitionists, and
-they took an active and eager interest in the question.
-All attention was now centred upon
-America, and the men and women there who were
-leaders in the Abolition movement, were well-known.
-Douglass found a hospitable public awaiting him.
-It was the time of the great political struggle for the
-repeal of the Corn Laws and the dissolution of the
-union between England and Ireland. Some of the
-greatest orators and statesmen in English history
-were on the stage of action at this period. The
-black leader was stirred and inspired by the debates
-in which such men as Cobden, Bright, Disraeli,
-Lord Brougham, Sir Robert Peel, Daniel O’Connell
-and Lord John Russell took part. He met all of
-them personally, was received cordially by them,
-and treated with much deference. He dined with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_102'>102</span>Bright and O’Connell, and in Belfast was tendered a
-breakfast, at which a member of parliament presided.
-While in Edinburgh he was entertained by the eminent
-philosopher, George Combe. Thomas Clarkson,
-who had assisted in inaugurating the anti-slavery
-movement in England, and who was at that
-time the most distinguished Abolitionist in the
-world, was deeply affected by meeting Mr. Douglass,
-of whom he had heard much. Taking both of
-his hands he feelingly said: “God bless you,
-Frederick Douglass; I have given sixty years of my
-life to the emancipation of your people, and if I
-had sixty more, they should all be given in the same
-way.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Mr. Douglass cherished a peculiar liking for
-Daniel O’Connell at that time the incomparable
-orator and leader of the Irish people. He had a
-genuine and lovable personality and was a powerful
-advocate. He had an intense hatred for slavery, as
-for all forms of oppression and injustice. He introduced
-Mr. Douglass always as the “Black
-O’Connell.” His fondness for the “Maryland
-slave” made the latter’s tour through Ireland a continuous
-ovation. At Cork, a public breakfast was
-tendered him and the mayor presided at the first
-meeting he addressed. On October 4th, Father
-Mathew devoted an evening to him and Mr. Buffum.
-The British and Foreign Anti-Slavery Society presented
-Douglass with a Bible splendidly bound in
-gold. In response to this gracious act, he made the
-following acknowledgment:</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“I accept thankfully this Bible, and while it shall
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_103'>103</span>have the best place in my home, I trust also to give
-its precepts a place in my heart. Twenty years ago
-while lying, not unlike a dog, at the feet of my mistress,
-I was roused from the sweet sleep of childhood
-to hear the narrative of Job. A few years afterward
-found me searching for the Scriptures in the muddy
-street gutters to rescue its pages from the filth. A
-few years later, I escaped from my chains; gained
-partial freedom, and became an advocate for the
-emancipation of my race. During this advocacy, a
-suspicion obtains that I am not what I profess to be,
-to silence which, it is necessary for me to write out
-my experiences in slavery and give the names of my
-enslavers. This endangers my liberty; persecuted,
-hunted and outraged in America, I have come to
-England, and behold the change. The chattel becomes
-a man. I breathe: I am free! Instead of
-culling the Scriptures from the mud, they come to
-me dressed in polished gold, as the free and unsolicited
-gift of devoted hearts.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Shortly after this happy occurrence, Douglass,
-with his associate, Mr. Buffum, left Ireland. He
-had spoken about fifty times to the people in various
-parts of the island. Everywhere he had made a deep
-impression and intensified the interest in the American
-struggle for emancipation.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In carrying the campaign into Scotland, he met
-for the first time something in the nature of an opposition
-or pro-slavery sentiment. William Lloyd
-Garrison had already arrived there. It was during
-the great excitement, in consequence of the position
-taken by the “Free Church” of Scotland in accepting
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_104'>104</span>money from slave-holders to be used in spreading
-the Gospel. In the cities of Glasgow, Greenock,
-Edinburgh, and other places were seen such sensational
-placards, as, “Send Back the Money.”
-These posters fairly indicated the state of public
-feeling upon this subject, which was intensified by
-the presence of Frederick Douglass, J. N. Buffum,
-William Lloyd Garrison, and George Thompson,
-and by their terrible arraignment of slavery. At
-one of the great meetings held at Cannon Mills,
-Edinburgh, Mr. Douglass was a speaker. It seemed
-to be a test of strength between the friends and foes
-of the policy of the “Free Church.” Doctors Cunningham
-and Candlish, men powerful in influence,
-learning, and eloquence, championed the cause of
-the “Free Church.” Mr. Douglass’s part in the
-meeting, was, as usual, a striking one. His facts
-and figures and actual experiences as a slave,
-silenced all arguments of a mere academic sort.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In one of his addresses in Scotland, when he was
-charged with being in the pay of some rival religious
-sect, he said: “I am not here alone: I have
-with me the learned, wise and revered heads of the
-church. But with or without their sanction, I should
-stand just where I do now, maintaining that man-stealing
-is incompatible with Christianity; that
-slave-holding and true religion are at war with each
-other, and that a Free Church should have no fellowship
-with a slave church. The Free Church, in
-vindicating their fellowship of slave-holders, have
-acted on a damning heresy that a man may be a
-Christian, whatever may be his practice, so his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>creed is right. It is this heresy that holds in chains
-three millions of men, women, and children in the
-United States.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Each of his Scotch addresses was of this uncompromising
-and stirring character. It was a matter
-of surprise and wonder to his associates to witness
-his resourcefulness and readiness to meet all arguments
-and to sweep aside all half-truths, uttered in
-behalf of slavery. Summing up his work in Scotland,
-one who had followed him and studied its effects,
-wrote: “He has divided the Free Church
-against itself on account of slavery. He has gained
-the admiration and esteem of all the friends of the
-slave in this country. He has always kept an open
-platform, yet none of the rabbis have been found
-gallant enough to break lance with him. He completely
-exposed their miserable attempts to reconcile
-slavery with Christianity.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>While in England and Scotland a man named
-Thompson, who formerly lived in St. Michaels, and
-who pretended to have known Douglass on the Freeland
-and Covey plantations, published a letter that
-tended to discredit some of his assertions. The ex-slave
-met these charges in a straightforward manner,
-which must have left no doubt of his truthfulness.
-In his reply to the Thompson letter, he said:
-“You have completely tripped up the heels of your
-slave-holding friends and laid them flat at my feet.
-You have done a piece of anti-slavery work which
-no anti-slavery man could do again. If I could see
-you now, amid the free hills of Scotland, where the
-ancient ‘black Douglas’ once met his foes, I presume
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_106'>106</span>I might summon sufficient courage to look you in the
-face; and were you to attempt to make a slave of me,
-it is possible you might find me almost as disagreeable
-a subject as was the Douglas to whom I have
-just referred.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The several months spent by the traveler in England
-were filled with interesting incidents. His
-oratorical triumph was complete, and the attentions
-accorded him by many prominent people, unusually
-flattering. Indeed, it can be said that he was
-positively lionized in London, but he bore it with
-becoming dignity and the grace of a man born to
-high conditions.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Perhaps special mention should be made of his
-address at the World’s Temperance Convention,
-held in Covent Garden, August 7, 1846. A large
-delegation from the United States was present and
-some prominent Americans were on the program.
-The meeting was an immense affair and, in point of
-interest, the number of delegates, and the countries
-represented, genuinely international in character.
-Mr. Douglass was asked to address the convention
-and his speech was looked forward to with great interest.
-He rather anticipated a sensational outcome
-of his attempt to make himself heard, because he
-was not called upon until the delegates had spoken,
-and what they had said furnished him with the
-very text that appealed most strongly to his convictions
-and feelings. As he rose, the convention was
-in a quiver of excitement, for it was the first time
-that this much-talked-of fugitive from slavery had
-had a chance to stand up in the presence of men and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_107'>107</span>women representing all shades of party opinion, and
-say the word that concerned the destiny of himself
-and his people. He began:</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“Mr. Chairman, Ladies and Gentlemen—I am
-not a delegate to this convention. Those who
-would have been most likely to elect me as a delegate
-could not, because they are to-night held in
-abject slavery in the United States. Sir, I regret,
-that I cannot fully unite with the American delegates
-in their patriotic eulogies of America and
-American societies. I cannot do so for this good
-reason: there are at this moment three millions of
-the American population, by slavery and prejudice,
-placed entirely beyond the pale of American temperance
-societies. The three million slaves are
-completely excluded by slavery, and four hundred
-thousand free colored people are almost as completely
-excluded by an inveterate prejudice against
-them on account of their color. [Cries of “Shame!
-Shame!”]</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“I do not say these things to wound the feelings
-of the American delegates; I simply mention them
-in their presence and before this audience that, seeing
-how you regard this hatred and neglect of the
-colored people, they may be inclined, on their return
-home, to enlarge the field of their temperance
-operations and embrace within the scope of their
-influence my long-neglected race. [Great cheering,
-and some confusion on the platform.]</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“Sir, to give you some idea of the difficulties
-and obstacles in the way of the temperance reformation
-of the colored population of the United States,
-allow me to state a few facts. About the year 1840,
-a few intelligent, sober, and benevolent colored
-people of Philadelphia, being acquainted with the
-alarming ravages of intemperance among a numerous
-class of colored people in that city, and finding
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_108'>108</span>themselves neglected and excluded from white societies,
-organized societies among themselves, appointed
-committees, sent out agents, built temperance
-halls, and were earnestly and successfully
-rescuing many from the fangs of intemperance.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“The cause went on nobly, until August 1, 1842,
-the day when England gave liberty to one hundred
-thousand souls in the West Indies. The colored temperance
-societies selected this day to march in procession
-through the city, in the hope that such a
-demonstration would have the effect of bringing
-others into their ranks. They formed their procession,
-unfolded their teetotal banners, and proceeded
-to the accomplishment of their purpose. It was a
-delightful sight. But, sir, they had not proceeded
-down two streets before they were brutally assailed
-by a ruthless mob; their ranks broken up; their
-persons beaten and pelted with stones and brickbats.
-One of their churches was burned to the ground,
-and their best temperance hall utterly demolished.”
-[“Shame! Shame! Shame!” from the audience
-and cries of “Sit down” from the Americans on
-the platform.]</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>A tremendous commotion was caused by this
-speech. The American delegation was alarmed and
-indignant. One member wrote an account of the
-event for the New York <cite>Evangelist</cite>, from which the
-following extracts will serve to gauge the feeling:</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“They all advocated the same cause, showed a
-glorious union of thought and feeling, and the effect
-was constantly being raised—the moral scene was
-superb and glorious—when Frederick Douglass, the
-colored Abolitionist, agitator and ultraist, came to
-the platform and so spoke <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">á la mode</span></i> as to ruin the
-influence almost of all that preceded! He lugged
-in anti-slavery or Abolition, no doubt prompted to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_109'>109</span>it by some of the politic ones who used him to do
-what they would not themselves venture to do in
-person. He is supposed to have been well paid for
-this abomination.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“What a perversion, an abuse, an iniquity
-against the law of reciprocal righteousness, to call
-thousands together and get them, some certain ones,
-to seem conspicuous and devoted for one sole and
-grand object, and then all at once, with obliquity,
-open an avalanche on them for some imputed evil
-or monstrosity, for which, whatever be the wound
-or injury inflicted, they were both too fatigued and
-hurried with surprise, and too straitened for time,
-to be properly prepared. I say it is a streak of
-meanness; it is abominable. On this occasion Mr.
-Douglass allowed himself to denounce America and
-all its temperance societies together as a grinding
-community of the enemies of his people; said evil
-with no alloy of good concerning the whole of us;
-was perfectly indiscriminate in his severities; talked
-of the American delegates and to them as if he had
-been our schoolmaster, and we his docile and devoted
-pupils; and launched his revengeful missiles
-at our country without one palliative word, and as
-if not a Christian or a true anti-slavery man lived
-in the whole United States.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“We all wanted to reply, but it was too late.
-The whole theatre seemed taken with the spirit of
-the Ephesian uproar; they were furious and boisterous
-in the extreme, and Mr. Kirk could hardly
-obtain a moment, though many were desirous in his
-behalf, to say a few words, as he did, very calmly
-and properly, that the cause of temperance was not
-at all responsible for slavery, and had no connection
-with it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>At a Peace Convention held in London, Douglass
-made an address from which the following excerpt
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_110'>110</span>is given to show to what an extent he at this time
-shared the illusions of the Abolitionists, who, while
-preaching the doctrine of non-resistance, were
-steadily feeding the passions that made war eventually
-inevitable:</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“You may think it somewhat singular, that I, a
-slave, an American slave, should stand forth at this
-time as an advocate of peace between two countries
-situated as this and the United States are, when it
-is universally believed that the war between them
-would result in the emancipation of three millions
-of my brethren, who are now held in the most cruel
-bonds in that country. I believe this would be the
-result; but such is my regard for the principle of
-peace; such is my deep, firm conviction that nothing
-can be attained for liberty universally by war,
-that were I to be asked the question whether I
-would have my emancipation by the shedding of
-one single drop of blood, my answer would be in
-the negative.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Thus he spoke in 1846, but by the time Lincoln
-was nominated for President, and war was actually
-impending, Douglass was prepared to welcome it as
-a part of the price to be paid for justice, progress,
-and freedom.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>His ability to discuss any of the live questions of
-the day was a matter of genuine surprise to the
-English people. At a farewell entertainment, given
-to him, March 30, 1847, just before leaving London,
-William Howitt, the author, said: “He [Douglass]
-has appeared in this country before the most
-accomplished audiences, who were surprised, not
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_111'>111</span>only at his talents, but at his extraordinary information;
-and all I can say is, I hope Americans will
-continue to send such men as Frederick Douglass,
-and slavery will soon be abolished.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Mr. Douglass had now spent about twenty-three
-months in England, Scotland, Ireland, and Wales.
-Like every other new experience, this opportunity
-for travel in foreign lands was an education, and
-those who had watched and heard him most often in
-his lecture-tours and in social intercourse, could
-easily note his progress in breadth of sympathy and
-intellectual grasp. He learned some things in England
-that he never could have learned in his own
-country. The possibility of a perfect comradeship
-between people of differing nationalities, creeds, and
-colors was a fact that deeply impressed him. He
-learned that the great men of the times, who had the
-power to make and unmake international law as
-well as to mould and express public opinion, all regarded
-slavery as a blight on civilization. He
-learned to have a new and stronger faith in the
-ability and disposition of the white race to deal
-fairly with his race. If he hated slavery more because
-of what he had seen, heard, and experienced
-in England, he had gained a new strength of heart
-and mind to battle for its extinction in America.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>It would have been pleasant for him to have remained
-abroad and have become a citizen of free
-Britain. No colored man had ever been more flattered
-and fêted by the public. His friends and admirers
-multiplied everywhere. Many of his oversea
-friends urged him to surrender his American
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_112'>112</span>allegiance, but no inducement, however alluring,
-could cause him to desert his fellow-men in bonds.
-In fact, when it was given out in the United
-States that an attempt would be made by his
-old masters, the Aulds, to arrest him on his return
-and carry him back to a Maryland plantation,
-Douglass wrote: “No inducement could be offered,
-strong enough to make me quit my hold upon
-America as my home. Whether a slave or a freeman,
-America is my home, and there I mean to
-spend and be spent in the cause of my outraged
-fellow countrymen.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>As the time approached for him to leave England,
-a deep concern for his safety began to be felt and
-expressed by his British friends. As an outcome of
-this feeling, a proposition was made by Mrs. Ellen
-Richardson, belonging to the Society of Friends,
-that a fund be raised to purchase his freedom and
-thus remove all possibility of danger of re-enslavement.
-The proposition was at once accepted, and
-gladly acted upon by Mrs. Richardson and her
-sister-in-law, Mrs. Henry Richardson. As the result
-of correspondence, the purchase price, £150, was
-named and the sum was raised. The following is a
-true copy of the legal papers by force of which
-Frederick Douglass became free:</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“Know all men by these presents, that I, Thomas
-Auld, of Talbot County and State of Maryland, for
-and in consideration of the sum of one hundred
-dollars<a id='r2'></a><a href='#f2' class='c017'><sup>[2]</sup></a> current money, to me paid by Hugh Auld
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_113'>113</span>of the city of Baltimore, in the said state, at and
-before the sealing and delivery of these presents, the
-receipt whereof I, the said Thomas Auld, do hereby
-acknowledge, have granted, bargained, and sold,
-and by these presents do grant, bargain, and sell
-unto the said Hugh Auld, his executors, administrators,
-and assigns, one Negro man, by the name
-of Frederick Bailey or Douglass, as he calls himself—he
-is now about twenty-eight years of age—to
-have and to hold the said Negro man for life. And
-I, the said Thomas Auld, for myself, my heirs, executors
-and administrators, all and singular, the
-said Frederick Bailey, alias Douglass, unto the said
-Hugh Auld, his executors, and administrators, and
-against all and every person or persons whatsoever,
-shall and will warrant and forever defend by these
-presents. In witness whereof, I set my hand and
-seal this thirteenth day of November, eighteen hundred
-and forty-six. (1846.)</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c018'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Thomas Auld.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c005'>“Signed, sealed and delivered in presence of
-Wrightson Jones, John C. Lear.”</p>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f2'>
-<p class='c004'><a href='#r2'>2</a>. The £150 were paid to Hugh Auld who had previously obtained
-his $100, which seems to have been a sort of quit claim
-deed from his brother Thomas.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c005'>“To all whom it may concern: Be it known that
-I, Hugh Auld of the city of Baltimore, in Baltimore
-County, in the State of Maryland, for divers good
-causes and considerations me thereunto moving,
-have released from slavery, liberated, manumitted,
-and set free, and by these presents do hereby release
-from slavery, liberate, manumit, and set free, my
-Negro man, named Frederick Bailey, otherwise
-called Douglass, being of the age of twenty-eight
-years or thereabouts, and able to work and gain a
-sufficient livelihood and maintenance; and him, the
-said Negro man named Frederick Douglass, I do
-declare to be henceforth free, manumitted and discharged
-from all manner of servitude to me, my
-executors and administrators forever.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“In witness whereof, I, the said Hugh Auld, have
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_114'>114</span>hereunto set my hand and seal the fifth of December,
-in the year one thousand eight hundred and
-forty-six.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c018'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Hugh Auld.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c005'>“Sealed and delivered in presence of T. Hanson
-Belt, James N. S. T. Wright.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>This purchase of Mr. Douglass’s freedom was not
-approved by some of the ultra-Abolitionists in the
-United States. A contributor to <cite>The Liberator</cite> said:
-“Let us beg of you never to publish another word
-in your paper about the ransom of Douglass. I am
-quite ashamed that our American Abolitionists
-should expose their narrowness in expressing so
-many regrets at their loss of slave-property in
-Douglass. They seem to feel that he was their
-property, and not his man.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Many Abolitionists thought it a violation of anti-slavery
-principles and a waste of money. Mr.
-Douglass’s own feelings in the matter are stated by
-himself in the following language: “For myself,
-viewing it in the light of a ransom or as money extorted
-by a robber, and regarding my liberty of
-more value than one hundred and fifty pounds sterling,
-I could not see in it either a violation of the law
-of morality or economy.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In still another practical way did his English
-friends show their affection for Douglass before he left
-them. Having learned upon his return to America
-that it was his desire to publish a newspaper, in the
-interest of his people, the sum of $2,500 was without
-difficulty raised and presented to him for that
-purpose.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_115'>115</span>The contrast between the conditions of his coming
-to England and those of his returning to the United
-States affords an interesting evidence of his power
-of conquest. He went to England knowing no one,
-and personally known by no one; he returned to his
-own country carrying with him the friendships of
-men and women whose acquaintance but few
-Americans, at that time, could have obtained. He
-went to Great Britain a slave in danger of re-capture
-and re-subjugation; he returned, freed from his master
-by the bounty of English friends. He was empowered
-and equipped to publish the gospel of immediate
-and unconditional emancipation.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Douglass arrived home in the spring of 1847. He
-sailed early Sunday, April 4th. The last night of his
-stay abroad was spent as the guest of John Bright
-and his sisters. From no one in England could
-Douglass have received a more gracious welcome
-and friendly benediction than from this great commoner.
-The only incident that in any way clouded
-his departure was the act of the officers of the
-steamer <em>Cambria</em> in refusing to let him have the berth
-previously engaged for him. When the English
-people heard of this, great indignation was voiced in
-the press and from the platform, in every part
-of the United Kingdom. The result was that Mr.
-Cunard in an open letter expressed his regrets, and
-Mr. Douglass was given a stateroom; but he was not
-permitted to leave it or to place himself in view of
-the other passengers during the sixteen days he was
-upon the sea.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_116'>116</span>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER VII<br> <span class='large'>HOME AGAIN AS A FREEMAN—NEW PROBLEMS AND NEW TRIUMPHS</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c003'>Frederick Douglass returned to American
-shores on the 20th day of April, 1847. The date
-and fact of his coming marked the beginning of a
-new chapter in his career. To be free and feel free
-was a great source of strength both to himself and
-to his friends, in renewing the struggle for emancipation.
-He had not only a bracing sense of security
-against the dangers of capture and return to slavery,
-but he had gained wonderfully in mental and
-spiritual equipment. The two years in England
-were years of education and inspiration. During
-that time he had met and mingled freely with large
-men who were dealing successfully with large problems.
-Emancipation had acquired a broader meaning
-for him as a consequence of his visit. In
-America he had not been able to free himself from
-the conviction that emancipation, confused as it was
-with all the interests of daily life, was a sectional or
-at most, a national question. Looking back, from
-this distance, upon his own life and the great struggle
-of which it had become a part, he was able to
-realize more fully than before the truth of what
-Garrison long had taught, that slavery was a world
-question,—a question not of national or sectional expediency,
-but of fundamental human right.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_117'>117</span>With this larger vision gained by European experience
-and study, he was the better prepared to
-take up the old battle-cry of “Unconditional
-Emancipation.” His trip abroad had not merely
-widened his vision and deepened his sense of the
-moral significance of the struggle in which he was
-engaged; it had measurably increased his prestige
-with the American public. The fact that Europe
-had recognized his talents and had honored, in him,
-the race and the cause he represented, strengthened
-his position as a speaker, and lent a new importance
-to the things he had to say. Before he went to
-England, he was seldom noticed or referred to in any
-of the great pro-slavery newspapers of the country,
-except as a “runaway-nigger” and a “freak,”
-“preternaturally clever.” After his return, allusions
-to him were frequent and more abusive. In
-giving notice of a public anti-slavery meeting in
-Boston, one of these papers said: “The Abolitionists
-headed by William Lloyd Garrison, and
-tailed by Mr. Frederick Douglass, the fugitive slave,
-are in full blast. He, Douglass, elaborates very
-eloquently and fearfully, and is a good deal of a
-demagogue in black.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>These newspaper attacks on Mr. Douglass were
-largely due to the resentment aroused in this country
-because of the way in which he had, in England,
-denounced America for its slave-holding policy.
-This feeling was not confined to the newspapers, but
-was shown at several large gatherings that Mr.
-Douglass addressed in company with William Lloyd
-Garrison.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_118'>118</span>In Boston an attempt was made to “silence” him.
-Stones were thrown in the meeting at Norristown,
-Pa., and at a very large assembly held in the court
-house at Harrisburg, Pa., on the 9th of August,
-1847, after Mr. Garrison had spoken without molestation,
-Douglass was violently interrupted when
-he tried to speak, and was not allowed to continue.
-But such disturbances were not general, nor did
-they have the effect of shaking the eloquent apostle’s
-determination to be heard. During the same
-month he and Garrison held numerous anti-slavery
-meetings in Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, and Ohio.
-There was in these meetings abundant evidence that
-the cause of Abolition was gaining ground. The
-gatherings in Oberlin and Cleveland were especially
-notable for the interest manifested. One of the
-Cleveland papers had the following notice of the
-meeting: “The Menagerie Company, Garrison,
-Douglass, Foster (and we expect Satan) are to be
-here on Saturday next and open at seven o’ clock in the
-evening in the big tent, and continue their harangues
-over the Sabbath. This trio has made sale for a
-great many unmerchantable eggs in other places.”
-It was evident, from the size of the Cleveland meeting,
-and from the interest aroused in the addresses
-of Douglass, Garrison, and Foster that this newspaper
-did not reflect the popular feeling.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In the early part of September, 1847, Mr. Douglass
-was the presiding officer of a colored convention
-held in Cleveland. His address upon this
-occasion was a notable departure from all former
-models. It showed that he had been giving a great
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_119'>119</span>deal of thought to the needs of his people. It was
-a powerful plea, “that the doors of the schoolhouse,
-the workshop, the church, and the college
-shall be open as freely to our children as to the children
-of other members of the community.” The
-following extract is especially important, and prophetic
-of the present-day needs of the colored race:
-“Try to get your sons into mechanical trades;
-press them into blacksmith-shops, the machine-shops,
-the joiner’s-shops, the wheelwright-shops,
-the cooper-shops, and the tailor-shops. Every blow
-of the sledge-hammer wielded by a sable arm is a
-powerful blow in support of our career. Every
-colored mechanic is, by virtue of circumstances, an
-elevator of his race. Every house built by black
-men is a strong tower against the allied hosts of
-prejudice. It is impossible for us to attach too
-much importance to this aspect of the subject.
-Trades are important. Wherever a man may be
-thrown by misfortune, if he have in his hands a
-useful trade, he is useful to his fellow-men, and will
-be esteemed accordingly, and, of all men who need
-trades, we are the most needy.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>It was advice of this kind, in which the passionate
-controversialist displayed from time to time
-something of the foresight and the constructive
-ability of the statesman, as well as his growing popularity
-with the wiser and more influential class of
-the white people, that gave Douglass high place,
-and made him the undisputed leader of the free colored
-element of the country.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Two things, above all others, were at this time
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_120'>120</span>pressing themselves upon his thought and attention:
-one was his cherished project of establishing a newspaper
-of his own; and the other, the preservation
-of his friendly relations with William Lloyd Garrison.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>He had long looked to Garrison and his associates
-for advice and direction in everything of importance,
-and in an enterprise of such moment as this
-newspaper, he naturally felt that their opinion was
-indispensable. The money was raised, as we have
-already seen, by English friends, and sent over to
-Mr. Douglass within three months after he reached
-America, with the understanding that the use of it
-was to be left wholly to his discretion. It was
-clearly stated that, if he thought it inexpedient to
-invest the funds in a newspaper, he could use them,
-under trustees of his personal choosing, for the benefit
-of himself and his children. But he wanted an
-“organ” of his own. As time went on he believed
-that he perceived the need of it more and more.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“I already saw myself,” he said, “wielding my
-pen as well as my voice in the great work of renovating
-the public mind and building up a public
-sentiment which should send slavery to the grave,
-and restore to ‘liberty and the pursuit of happiness’
-the people with whom I suffered.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Among other considerations that moved him to
-establish his own paper was the conviction that the
-example of a well-managed and ably edited organ
-would be a powerful evidence that the Negro was
-too much of a man to be held a chattel.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Another side to this question had not occurred to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_121'>121</span>him until this time. His attention was called to the
-fact that he was more than Frederick Douglass, the
-individual. What he did and said, and what he
-was and was to be, were of so much concern to his
-associates and co-workers that, when it became
-known that he intended to start a newspaper, difficulties
-of all kinds arose. Douglass knew that
-Garrison opposed his enterprise. Could he ignore
-that leader’s advice? Clearly, his first impression
-was that he could not. He felt then and ever afterward
-that he owed everything to Mr. Garrison. It
-was the latter who had discovered and brought him
-to the attention of the people. The word of such a
-man must be law to him. Garrison’s philosophy
-of this whole slavery question was accepted by
-Douglass without an “if.” He was so completely
-under the spell of the great Abolitionist’s personality
-that, when he learned of the opposition to
-the newspaper project, he was overwhelmed with
-surprise and disappointment.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Various reasons were given for this attitude.
-Mr. Garrison thought it quite “impractical to combine
-the editor and the lecturer without either causing
-the paper to be more or less neglected, or the
-sphere of lecturing to be seriously circumscribed.”
-It was further urged that the publication was not
-needed, that it would diminish the support of the
-papers already in existence, and that it could not
-succeed. Some of Douglass’s other friends advised
-him, that being a man without any education
-and without any literary training, he would make
-himself ridiculous as an editor. These counselors
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_122'>122</span>wished to save him from the humiliation of an ignominious
-failure, and cautioned him against the
-mistake of allowing his ambition to bring him into
-ridicule and contempt. This opposition coming
-from his former advisers and associates caused him
-to hesitate, and, for a time, to give up the scheme;
-so, instead of starting the paper as soon as he received
-the money to be devoted to that purpose, he
-postponed the project for nearly a year, out of deference
-to the judgment of these wise and close
-friends.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>During the interval, Mr. Douglass had time to
-examine into the merits of the advice against his
-becoming an editor. He had a further opportunity
-to feel the public pulse and learn something more
-definite in regard to the prospects for good or
-evil of a newspaper, such as he had in mind. He
-was much in demand on the lecture platform. His
-vogue was growing all the time, and with increasing
-popularity and power, he saw the possibility of a
-reading constituency large enough to support his
-publication and widen his influence.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>But other considerations intervened to widen the
-breach between himself and Garrison. The Abolition
-movement, as planned and carried on by the
-outspoken leader and his followers, was non-political.
-It sought to effect a revolution, but by the
-moral regeneration of the people. Slavery, as Garrison
-conceived it, was a national sin which could be
-reached only by an appeal to the national conscience;
-but the effect of the anti-slavery agitation
-had not been confined to those who accepted his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_123'>123</span>revolutionary doctrines. Many persons who were
-unable to follow the relentless logic of Mr. Garrison
-to its revolutionary conclusions were roused to opposition
-to slavery by the sting and fire of his
-sermons. The number of people who were disposed
-to do something to check its extension was rapidly
-increasing. This wider anti-slavery movement was
-fast drifting from a mere unorganized sentiment,
-without force sufficient to compel resistance, into a
-political party with a definite platform. Those who
-could not follow the “disunion” and “non-resistance”
-principles of Garrison, but began to fear the
-aggression of the slave-power, joined the “Free
-Soil” and “Liberty” parties. The issue raised by
-the Abolitionists was daily becoming less a question
-of the right or wrong of slavery and more a question
-of how, under the actual circumstances in which
-the institution existed, it might best be gotten rid of.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Garrison and his followers, supported by the infallible
-logic of their leader, still clung to the disunion
-policy, which was primarily a discharge of
-conscience from all complicity with slavery and
-only secondarily a means to the abolition of slavery.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Frederick Douglass, with less consistency, perhaps,
-and a keener sense for the practical exigencies
-of the situation, was undoubtedly influenced by a
-desire to get into close touch with this larger
-audience. The sequence of events, and Douglass’s
-position in relation to them, tended to convince him
-that he was justified in his desire to found a newspaper.
-A colored periodical would be no new
-thing. As early as 1827 the <cite>Ram’s Horn</cite>, published
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_124'>124</span>by and for Negroes, had been started in the
-North. Other papers conducted by colored men
-were, <cite>The Mystery</cite>, <cite>The Disfranchised American</cite>, <cite>The
-Northern Star</cite>, and <cite>The Colored Farmer</cite>. Opportunity
-and duty seemed to combine in urging him
-to do the thing that he had abandoned in deference
-to the advice of Mr. Garrison and at length he
-reached the point where he no longer feared failure,
-every objection urged against his purpose seeming
-to be overcome.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Being thus convinced, he heroically set himself
-to the task. The first duty was to select a field
-sufficiently removed from New England not to compete
-with <cite>The Liberator</cite> and <cite>The Anti-Slavery Standard</cite>.
-Rochester, N. Y., was the place chosen. This
-was good anti-slavery territory, but it was of the
-Gerrit Smith kind as distinguished from the Garrison
-kind. Both of these men were towers of strength
-in the cause of Abolition, and both were lavish in
-the expenditure of time and means for the cause of
-freedom.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>On the 3d day of December, 1847, appeared the
-first issue of the <cite>North Star</cite>. The name was afterwards
-changed to <cite>Frederick Douglass’s Paper</cite>, in
-order to avoid all possible confusion with other
-anti-slavery organs with similar names. It was
-issued weekly, and had an average circulation of
-3,000 subscribers, with a maximum of 4,000. A
-colored man named Delaney, who afterward distinguished
-himself as a Union soldier in the Civil
-War, had had some experience in newspaper work
-and aided Mr. Douglass in the publication. Financially
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_125'>125</span>the paper soon proved to be more of a sacrifice
-than a money-making venture, but in this there
-was no disappointment, for its purpose was to make
-public opinion rather than money. It took everything
-that Mr. Douglass had and could obtain to
-keep the <cite>North Star</cite> in the newspaper firmament.
-He became deeply in debt and was compelled to
-mortgage his home to meet the heavy demands upon
-him. His old friends and many new ones came
-repeatedly to his rescue. The most important of
-these was Mrs. Julia Griffith Crofts, a gracious
-woman who took hold of the business management
-herself. After a year’s effort the circulation increased
-from 2,000 to 4,000, and enough money was
-realized to pay off all indebtedness and lift the
-mortgage from Mr. Douglass’s home. The paper
-grew in popularity and influence, and its patrons
-and financial helpers included such men as Gerrit
-Smith, Horace Mann, Salmon P. Chase, Joshua R.
-Giddings, Charles Sumner, William H. Seward, and
-John G. Palfrey. Support came from these leaders,
-not in a patronizing way to help a “poor, struggling
-colored man’s paper,” but rather as a tribute
-to the high merit of the publication. Those who
-were sure that Mr. Douglass could never write as
-well as he could speak were surprised at this new
-evidence of his versatility and resourcefulness.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In an issue of Mr. Garrison’s paper, dated January
-28, 1848, these flattering words appeared:
-“The facility with which Mr. Douglass has adapted
-himself to his new and responsible position is another
-proof of his genius and is worthy of especial
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_126'>126</span>praise. His editorial articles are exceedingly well
-written; and the typographical, orthographical,
-and grammatical accuracy with which the <cite>North
-Star</cite> is printed surpasses that of any other paper
-ever published by a colored man.” Edmund
-Quincy, commenting on the <cite>North Star</cite>, paid a high
-tribute to the new editor and said that its “literary
-and mechanical execution would do honor to any
-paper, new or old, anti-slavery or pro-slavery, in
-the country.” The ease with which Mr. Douglass
-adapted himself to his new responsibility, and the
-high praise that came to him from all parts, added
-immensely to his influence and prestige. What
-the <cite>North Star</cite> said editorially on the many live
-questions of the day was liberally quoted and widely
-discussed.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The successful carrying out of this enterprise was a
-distinct advantage to Mr. Douglass as a vindication
-of his own individuality. It is a good thing for a
-man to have an idea, but it is a better thing for him
-to have sufficient force of character to put his idea
-into effect. A man stands or falls by what he is
-able to do rather than by what he is able to say.
-Mr. Douglass was told that the responsibility was too
-great. It is always at this point that the strength of
-a man is tested. Frederick Douglass rose above the
-fears of his friends and took the first step that led
-him to a more commanding position. The determination
-to have his own way in this newspaper
-enterprise was his first “declaration of independence.”
-While Mr. Douglass tells us that he felt an
-abiding gratitude toward William Lloyd Garrison
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_127'>127</span>for what that man had done in giving him a start in
-his upward career, he had reached the point where he
-must cease to rely upon the initiative of others. He
-must begin to trust himself and his own powers, and
-cease to be a burden upon those who had been his
-guides and teachers.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The anti-slavery cause was assuming large proportions.
-Every event in the social, economic, and
-political life of the nation pushed this question into
-prominence. All sorts of people were becoming interested
-in the slavery issues, but there were so
-many sides to the problem that it was not always
-easy to see the right. There was for a time a growing
-confusion of ideas, policies, doctrines, and a
-puzzling division and subdivision of forces, both in
-the pro-slavery and anti-slavery ranks. There were
-those who thought and asserted that the Federal
-Constitution was a “pro-slavery instrument,” and
-others who were equally insistent that it was anti-slavery.
-There were those who were Abolitionists
-in doctrine, but in politics voted with one or the
-other of the old parties, both of which were pro-slavery
-in their policies. There were those who,
-while believing in the equality of the Negro, were
-extreme in their opposition to the admission of
-women into membership in anti-slavery societies.
-A large number of liberty-loving people could
-go no further in their hostility to slavery than to
-oppose its extension into new territory. These
-made a partial trial of their anti-slavery feelings
-in the Free Soil and the Liberty parties.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Only two classes of people in the country occupied
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_128'>128</span>fixed positions on the great question.
-These were William Lloyd Garrison and his associates,
-and the slave-holders and their followers.
-Mr. Garrison’s famous utterance that “the United
-States Constitution was a covenant with death and
-an agreement with hell,” and his declaration of “no
-union with slave-holders,” constituted his unvarying
-platform. The slave-holding interests were
-equally tenacious of their creed and quite as fixed
-in their determination to risk everything rather
-than yield an inch to the anti-slavery clamor.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Enough has been said to show that the time had
-come when the man who wished to be respected, believed
-in, and followed, must be strong enough to
-have convictions of his own and be responsible to
-himself and the public for these convictions. It
-was now incumbent upon Mr. Douglass to find solid
-ground on which, amidst so many conflicting
-opinions, to oppose slavery. The conclusions of his
-studies and thinking had the disagreeable effect of
-leading him away from Garrison’s doctrine of “non-resistance”
-and “disunion.” From his first reading
-of <cite>The Liberator</cite> he held firmly to Garrison. What
-that leader said or believed on the question, Mr.
-Douglass accepted without reservation. It is well
-that he did. No one could be a weakling who
-lived and labored under so stimulating a guide.
-There was something sublime in his moral courage,
-and something extraordinary in the steadiness with
-which, unswerved by the changing circumstances
-about him, he pursued his fixed purposes. It was
-this quality of soul in him that made him always
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_129'>129</span>the dominant figure and influence in the contest.
-Abolition had become so closely identified with his
-name that the question could scarcely be discussed
-without some reference to him. It is no wonder that
-Frederick Douglass was so completely under his
-spell, but it must certainly be counted an evidence
-of the ex-slave’s intellectual sincerity and strength
-of mind that when he could in practice no longer
-follow the disunion theory, he had the courage and
-ability to frame a clear and logical statement of
-the grounds for his own action.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>His explanation of his change of position is best
-told in his own words:</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“My first opinions were naturally derived and
-honestly entertained. Brought directly, when I
-escaped from slavery, into contact with Abolitionists,
-who regarded the Constitution as a slave-holding
-instrument and finding their views supported by
-the united and entire history of every department of
-the government, it is not strange that I assumed the
-Constitution to be just what these friends made it
-seem to be. I was bound, not only by their superior
-knowledge, to take their opinions in respect to
-this subject, as the true ones, but also because I had
-no means of showing this unsoundness.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“But for the responsibility of conducting a
-public journal, and the necessity imposed upon me
-of meeting opposite views from Abolitionists outside
-of New England, I should in all probability
-have remained firm in my disunion views. My
-new circumstances compelled me to re-think the
-whole subject, and to study with some care, not
-only the just and proper rules of legal interpretation,
-but the origin, design, nature, rights, powers,
-and duties of civil government, and also the relations
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_130'>130</span>which human beings sustain to it. By such a
-course of thought and reading, I was brought to the
-conclusion that the Constitution of the United
-States, inaugurated ‘to form a more perfect union,
-establish justice, insure domestic tranquillity, provide
-for the common defense, promote the general
-welfare and secure the blessings of liberty,’ could not
-well have been designed at the same time to maintain
-and perpetuate a system of rapine and murder like
-slavery, especially as not one word can be found in
-the Constitution to authorize such a belief. Then
-again, if the declared purposes of an instrument
-are to govern the meaning of all its parts and details,
-as they clearly should, the Constitution of our
-country is pure warrant for the abolition of slavery
-in every state of the Union.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Having thus, and by other reasonings convinced
-himself of the unconstitutionality of slavery, the
-editor of the <cite>North Star</cite> voiced the conviction in and
-out of season, until it was overthrown. In thus
-separating from the Garrisonian Abolitionists, there
-was much heart-burning on both sides, but nothing
-of the nature of rivalry or jealousy, as some writers
-have attempted to show. Both Garrison and Douglass
-were manly in their attitude toward friend
-and foe, and too sincere in their convictions to be
-otherwise than high-minded in their differences on
-matters of principle.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>It has been charged against Mr. Douglass, and
-not without reason, that he was ungrateful in turning
-upon the men who had made him what he
-was; that it was ambition and the desire for success
-in a wider field which prompted him to independent
-action. No doubt there were, and are,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_131'>131</span>those to whom his course during this period seemed
-then and still seems unwise, mistaken, and directed
-rather by selfish interests than by the lofty idealism
-that guided the labors of the Abolitionists, from
-whom he at this time parted company. However
-this may be, it is likely that the differences which
-sprang up between Garrison and Douglass at this
-period were due, in great part, to certain fundamental
-differences of mind and temperament making
-this divergence of views inevitable.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The power which Garrison exercised over his
-contemporaries was due, to a considerable degree,
-to the clearness and vigor of his intellect and the
-unflinching fidelity with which he followed its decrees.
-The first thing that he demanded of himself
-and of others was that they should think and feel
-rightly in regard to this question of slavery. The
-revolution he sought to effect was a purely spiritual
-one: he aimed to change men’s minds and hearts.
-The power he desired to overthrow was a state of
-mind—a state of mind which permitted slavery to
-exist.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Douglass, on the contrary, was destined, by natural
-disposition, for a different field of action. He
-was by temperament a politician, and, like all politicians,
-more or less of an opportunist. He was
-less interested in the theory upon which slavery
-should be abolished than he was in the means by
-which freedom could be achieved. No doubt he
-was influenced to a considerable degree, in the formulation
-of his views in regard to the Constitution,
-by his practical sense of what the situation demanded,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_132'>132</span>and, even if these views have not been upheld
-by subsequent interpretation of that document,
-they still appeal strongly to common sense.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Whatever motives may have influenced Douglass
-in taking the position that he did, there seems to be
-no reason for doubting their sincerity. Though
-drawn into different fields of endeavor in the cause
-of anti-slavery, the importance of Garrison and his
-work was in no wise diminished in Douglass’s eyes.
-In 1860 he wrote to <cite>The Liberator</cite> concerning the
-anti-slavery society: “So far from working for the
-annihilation of that society, I never failed, even in
-the worst times of my controversy with it, to recognize
-that organization as the most efficient generator
-of anti-slavery sentiment in the country.” And in
-September, 1890, he said in Boston: “It was they
-[Garrison and Phillips] who made Abraham Lincoln
-and the Republican party possible. What
-abolished slavery was the moral sentiment which
-had been created, not by the pulpit, but by the
-Garrisonian platform.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Finally, it seems clear that, through all this controversy,
-Douglass retained his affection for William
-Lloyd Garrison, and that this feeling was honestly
-reciprocal. There is, in the life of the great Abolitionist,
-as told by his children, a bit of correspondence
-that reveals the tender side of these two robust
-human natures. It was at a time when Mr. Garrison
-was very much disturbed on account of the
-Negro newspaper project. Mr. Douglass had accompanied
-him on a lecture tour as far west as
-Cleveland, where Garrison became ill and his colored
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_133'>133</span>colleague was compelled to leave him to meet
-other engagements. Letters were frequently exchanged,
-but for some reason they were not received.
-This mutual failure to hear from each other gave
-rise to many unpleasant misgivings. Samuel J.
-May, the friend of both, writing to Garrison under
-date of October 8, 1847, says: “Frederick Douglass
-was very much troubled that he did not get any
-tidings from you when he reached Syracuse on the
-24th of September. He left reluctantly, yet thinking
-that you would be following in a day or two, and
-as he did not get any word from you at Waterloo,
-nor at Auburn, he was almost sure he should meet
-you at my house. His countenance fell and his
-heart failed him when he found me likewise in suspense
-about you. Not until he arrived at West
-Winfield did he get any relief, and then through
-<cite>The Liberator</cite> of the 23d.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Some days afterward, Mr. Garrison wrote as follows:
-“Is it not strange that Douglass has not
-written a single line to me or any one else in this
-place, inquiring after my health, since he left me
-on a bed of illness? It will also greatly surprise
-our friends in Boston to hear that, in regard to his
-project for establishing the <cite>North Star</cite>, he never
-opened his lips to me on the subject, nor asked my
-advice in any particular whatever! Such conduct
-grieves me to the heart. His conduct about the
-paper has been impulsive, inconsiderate, and highly
-inconsistent with his decision in Boston. What
-will his English friends say of such a strange somerset?
-I am sorry that friend Quincy did not express
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_134'>134</span>himself more strongly against the project in
-<cite>The Liberator</cite>. It is a delicate matter, I know, but
-it must be met with firmness.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>True to his own high sense of gratitude to Mr.
-Garrison, and always deferential to the latter’s position
-in the anti-slavery fight, Mr. Douglass never
-permitted himself to utter a single word of criticism
-or complaint. The field was large enough and the
-work was great enough for each to display the full
-measure of his respective powers toward the one
-great object, the abolition of slavery. During this
-period, Mr. Douglass always found time and opportunity
-for platform work. Every great gathering
-of the anti-slavery forces was enlivened in interest
-by his presence. His power as an orator did not
-diminish, as was predicted, by his continued ascendency
-as an editor. On the contrary, his words
-gained force as he became more confident of himself,
-and more clear in regard to his convictions.
-In the great anti-slavery convention held in New
-York, he made a speech which revealed remarkable
-strength. The following extract from a report of the
-meeting is worth quoting in proof of the stirring
-quality of his address:—</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“Frederick Douglass now takes the platform, and
-is welcomed with applause. The assembly is now
-fixed in its close attention, and Frederick is going
-on to show up the cowardly and sneaking conduct of
-John P. Hale in bringing in a bill to protect property,
-and not daring to stand up and fearlessly
-advocate the right of slaves to run away, and the
-right and duty of Abolitionists to protect them.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_135'>135</span>Frederick is describing <cite>Punch’s</cite> portraits of Brother
-Jonathan, with the devil hovering over him, eyeing
-with satisfaction passing events. The audience
-give him great applause. He is speaking to great
-effect, portraying the wrongs of the colored population
-of this nation. His eloquence sways the great
-assembly with him. He denounces the Northerners,
-who swear to support the Constitution, as the real
-slave-holders of the country. It is good to listen to
-him. He shows up the Northern apologists of
-slavery as those whose smiles he does not want. He
-pledges himself to denounce those enemies of God
-and man, who swear to support the Constitution, as
-his enemies. Frederick has got the audience into a
-great state of glorification; and he is now showing
-that there is no way to abolish slavery except by the
-dissolution of the Union. There, he is done, and
-the meeting is breaking up. It has been a pleasant
-and profitable time.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In the course of his career as a public speaker,
-Douglass developed a capacity for repartee that
-made him the dread of any one who had the temerity
-to interrupt him in a public discussion. At the
-convention to which I have just referred, he was
-described as “with brows knit, fiery eyes like daggers,
-scorn upon his thick lips, and lurking in his
-sable woe-begone visage the traces of malignity,
-disappointment, and despair.” By another paper,
-when speaking on the same platform with Garrison,
-Phillips, and Lucretia Mott, he was called the
-“master-genius of the crowd.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In 1848, Mr. Douglass took another step forward,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_136'>136</span>and became an advocate of female suffrage. He
-had had opportunity to judge of the worth of woman
-in the anti-slavery movement. The work done by
-Lucretia Mott, the Grimké sisters, Frances Wright,
-Ernestine L. Rose, and other forceful leaders,
-strongly impressed him with what seemed to him
-the great injustice of excluding such women from
-the benefits of those rights by means of which
-citizenship could be protected. On the 19th day
-of July of that year the Seneca Falls convention
-was held. The following extract from the <cite>North
-Star</cite> shows Mr. Douglass’s position:</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“We are free to say that in respect to political
-rights, we hold women to be justly entitled to all we
-claim for man. We go further and express our conviction
-that all political rights, which it is expedient
-for man to exercise, it is equally so for women. All
-that distinguishes man as an intelligent and accountable
-being is equally true of woman; and if that
-government only is just which governs only by the
-free consent of the governed, there can be no reason
-in the world for denying to woman the exercise of
-the elective franchise, or a hand in making and administering
-the laws of the land. Our doctrine is
-that ‘Right is of no sex.’ We, therefore, bid the
-women engaged in this movement our humble Godspeed.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Mr. Douglass consistently held to these views
-ever afterward. He was one of the first of all prominent
-Americans to champion the cause of female
-suffrage, and the women in return esteemed him and
-accorded to him more honor than has been shown to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_137'>137</span>most men by their organizations. He was always a
-guest in any large gathering of woman suffragists.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In connection with the labor of running his newspaper
-and keeping up a strenuous interest in the
-many public questions that appealed to his heart
-and conscience, it is fitting to make some mention of
-his early experiences in Rochester, N. Y., his home,
-and the scene of his most important activities for
-twenty-five years. He became deeply attached to
-the city and its people. He said: “I know of no
-place in the Union where I could have located at
-the time with less resistance, or received a larger
-measure of sympathy and coöperation, and I now
-look back to my life and labor with unalloyed satisfaction,
-having spent a quarter of a century among
-its people. I shall always feel more at home there
-than anywhere else in this country.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>When Mr. Douglass began the publication of the
-<cite>North Star</cite>, there were people in the city who felt it
-a sort of disgrace that a Negro paper should be established
-in their midst. This was not surprising.
-It is doubtful if, at that time, any inhabited spot in
-the United States could have been found entirely
-free from race prejudice. So far as the Negro was
-concerned, wherever he wished and tried to be a
-good citizen, he found himself in the “enemy’s country.”
-The most troublesome of Douglass’s early
-experiences in Rochester was the attempt to educate
-his children. They were not allowed to attend the
-public school in the district in which he lived and
-owned property; and his young daughter, who was
-the “apple of his eye,” was so unkindly treated in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_138'>138</span>Tracy Seminary, a school for girls, that she had to
-leave it. This difficulty, like every other that he encountered
-in his career, served only to embolden
-him; it encouraged him to fight. He went at the
-question with his characteristic force, and before
-long every barrier was removed and the children of
-black parents were freely admitted to all the schools
-of the city. Indeed he conducted himself so well
-and was personally so interesting that he soon became
-a popular citizen of Rochester, and his
-friends were as numerous and cordial in pro-slavery
-as in anti-slavery circles. Among those mentioned
-in his biography, for whom he had a special fondness,
-are Isaac Post, William Hallowell, Samuel D.
-Porter, William C. Bliss, Benjamin Fish, Asa Anthony,
-and Myron Holley. From time to time he
-addressed the citizens in Corinthian Hall. His
-audiences were always composed of the best people
-in Rochester, and in this way he did much to break
-down the prejudice against his race. This hall was
-built and owned by a prominent pro-slavery man,
-but so great was his respect for Mr. Douglass that
-he cheerfully allowed it to be used for the propaganda
-of emancipation. Thus the black leader became
-proud of Rochester and in more ways than
-can well be recited, the city honored him as no other
-colored man has ever been honored by an American
-municipality.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_139'>139</span>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER VIII<br> <span class='large'>FREE COLORED PEOPLE AND COLONIZATION</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c003'>The recognized leadership of Frederick Douglass
-among the colored people of the country may be
-dated from the publication of the <cite>North Star</cite>. Prior
-to that time he was regarded as an Abolition orator
-and a conspicuous example of the possibilities of
-the Negro race. He had not yet established his
-relationship with the free colored people of the
-North.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Douglass came from the South. His hardest experiences
-and bitterest memories were those of the
-Southern plantations. It was the toiling black
-masses, whose fortunes he had shared, that claimed
-his first and profoundest sympathy and interest.
-“Freedom first and rights afterward,” was the precept
-that had thus far guided his efforts in behalf of
-his race. His position as the publisher of a colored
-newspaper brought him into closer touch with the
-interests and aspirations of the free colored people
-of the North. They had obtained freedom, but they
-were thus far in practice, to a large degree, without
-rights. Douglass seemed to feel that the work he
-was doing and the position he occupied gave him
-some special claim to the support and loyalty of
-these people. He sometimes complained of and
-took deeply to heart the criticism and petty fault-finding
-with which a few of his fellow freedmen followed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_140'>140</span>his movements. But, on the whole, they
-gave him generous support, and accorded him
-grateful recognition for his services. The leading
-colored men of the period who, in various ways,
-were helping the cause of emancipation, rallied
-around him and lived and labored in intimate association
-with him.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>At this time the free Negroes formed a considerable
-portion of the American population. In 1850
-there were about 230,000 of them in the slave-states
-and about 200,000 in the free-states. The liberation
-from bondage of this nearly half-million of colored
-persons had been brought about in various ways.
-The larger portion of them in the Northern states
-became free through their emancipation by Northern
-slave-holders. Those in the slave-states were either
-manumitted by their former masters or had by personal
-enterprise bought their own freedom. Here
-and there were a few West Indian colored people
-who had come to the United States to find a home.
-An ever-increasing number in the North were runaway
-slaves who had gained their freedom in some
-such way as Frederick Douglass had gained his.
-These were for the most part a superior class of men
-and women. The fact that they had the courage
-and enterprise to win their own liberty is good evidence
-that they had personal initiative and ambition.
-Among their number were many who, like
-Douglass, had secretly learned to read and write
-while they were still slaves. Others were first-rate
-mechanics who, in spite of opposition, found good
-employment.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_141'>141</span>The attitude of the white citizens of the North
-toward the free people of color was, in almost
-every way, hostile. The slave-holders of the South
-were angered by the loss of their property and the
-Northern people were annoyed by the presence, in
-their midst, in ever-increasing numbers, of this
-class. In fact, prejudice against the free blacks in
-the Northern states came to be of the most uncompromising
-sort. In many sections the status of the free
-Negro was often little better than that of an outlaw.
-It was literally true that he had “no rights that a
-white man was bound to respect.” Wherever the
-Negro turned his face for encouragement or for opportunity,
-he met with opposition and discouragement.
-His children were generally shut out of the
-public and private schools. In many instances
-those which would admit colored pupils, in defiance
-of public sentiment, were burned down or mobbed
-and the teachers ostracized. The case of Miss
-Prudence Crandall, in Canterbury, Conn., in 1833,
-is fairly illustrative of the public feeling in regard
-to Negro education. Miss Crandall was a beautiful
-young Quakeress of tender heart and great courage,
-who had opened a school for young women in the
-village of Canterbury. A chance admission of a
-colored girl raised such a storm of indignation
-among her neighbors that she was assailed by a mob
-and an attempt was made to burn the building.
-When she still persisted in having her way, she was
-arrested and sent to jail.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Other instances of this kind might be cited. In
-nothing were the Northern people more bitterly intolerant
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_142'>142</span>than in their opposition to the education of
-the children of free colored families. The same
-spirit that in the slave-holding states accounted it a
-crime to teach colored people to read and write,
-made it very dangerous for any man or woman to
-do, or attempt to do, the same thing in the free-states.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In some of the Northern commonwealths, as Illinois,
-for example, the term “black laws” was
-given to a code of special regulations which were
-applied to men and women of a dark complexion.
-In nearly all of the states north of the Ohio, the
-Negro was disfranchised either by constitution,
-statute, or public sentiment. In practice, he was
-not regarded as a member of political society and
-was, consequently, almost wholly without the guarantee
-of civil rights. The Christian people were
-often as hostile as non-church people. Mr. Garrison
-mentions “a certain Baptist church in Hartford,
-Conn., where the ‘Negro pews’ were boarded up in
-front so that only peep-holes gave an outlook;
-truly a human menagerie.” In a Massachusetts
-town, the floor was cut out from under a colored
-member’s pew by the church authorities, so that he
-could not occupy it. In all means of travel, either
-by rail or stage-coach, the Negro passenger was rigidly
-quarantined. His presence was everywhere
-frowned upon unless he appeared as a servant or a
-slave.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>This anti-Negro feeling in the North was not a
-passing whim or sentiment; it was deeply rooted
-and constitutional. People, noble and ignoble, were
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_143'>143</span>alike influenced by race prejudice. Abolitionists
-found themselves swayed to such an extent by the
-sentiment about them that they often did not have
-the courage to act consistently with their principles.
-Mr. Douglass gives a very interesting incident in
-the early part of his career, which aptly illustrates
-how at times race feeling manifested itself in the
-most unexpected places. He had been invited to
-speak at Concord, N. H., by a subscriber of <cite>The
-Liberator</cite>. Arriving in the town, he went directly
-to the home of the Abolitionist, where it was expected
-he would be entirely welcome. He was received
-with anything but enthusiasm. When the
-good man got ready to go to the church, where the
-meeting was to take place, he drove off alone and
-left the orator of the occasion to walk and find the
-way—a distance of two miles—as best he could.
-Upon reaching the church, Mr. Douglass was
-obliged to introduce himself, as no one was willing to
-risk his reputation by standing sponsor for a Negro.
-After the address, the Abolitionists went to their
-several homes for lunch, but no one invited Mr.
-Douglass to eat, and the hotel did not entertain
-Negroes. Hungry, chilly, and desolate, he found
-his way to the graveyard, and while roaming among
-the graves and contemplating the equality of men in
-death, he was approached by a gentleman who
-proved to be a Democratic senator from New Hampshire.
-He took Mr. Douglass to his home and
-treated him with the greatest courtesy.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Another cause of racial antagonism was the
-dread, on the part of slave-owners, that the presence
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_144'>144</span>of an increasing number of free colored people
-in the free-states would be an incentive to the more
-enterprising slaves to run away. This fear was certainly
-justified by the constantly enlarging stream
-of fugitives. The Negro’s growing desire for freedom
-was the fundamental weakness of the slave-system.
-When the veterans of the War of 1812
-returned to the Southern states and told of the land
-of Canada which was consecrated to free men, the
-seed of discontent took root in slavery’s soil. The
-good news was passed along, and, as a result, thousands
-of slaves learned to associate the words Canada
-and freedom. Many a one, ignorant of everything
-except his master and the plantation, had received
-tidings of the Haytian struggle for liberty; of the
-Nat Turner uprising in Virginia; and of the success
-of those who had the courage and enterprise to
-flee to Massachusetts, New York, and elsewhere
-north of the Ohio River. Negroes who had dared
-to emancipate themselves in the way Frederick
-Douglass had done were a direct menace to the security
-of slavery. Every man who succeeded in
-making his escape began at once to plan and plot
-for the escape of those he had left behind. On the
-border-land of freedom there was continuous skirmishing
-for friends in chains.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In spite of the humble position they occupied,
-the free Negroes, in one way or another, helped to
-make sentiment against the slave-power. Like
-Douglass, they became “human arguments,” at
-once offering evidence as to the capacity of the
-race and the limitations that slavery imposed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_145'>145</span>upon it. They were quickeners of the public conscience.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Since the Negroes were escaping from Southern
-plantations, in spite of all precautions and every
-kind of threat and punishment, an organized effort
-was made to send all free colored people out of the
-country and deposit them on the west shore of Africa.
-This movement found expression in the
-American Colonization Society, which was organized
-in 1817. Its declared purposes were:</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>(1) “To colonize the blacks on the West Coast
-of Africa.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>(2) “To discourage manumission by slave-holders.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>(3) “To avoid insurrection.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>An attempt was put forth to make this colonization
-scheme a national policy, and the general government,
-as well as the several states, was appealed
-to for its support. In many of the slave-holding
-states there were direct appropriations of money to
-forward this enterprise. Ministers, statesmen, educators,
-slave-holders, and many who were not slave-holders,
-endorsed the plan of the Colonization
-Society as a most happy solution of the difficult
-problem of dealing with the Negro question. It
-met with popular favor throughout the country.
-The Southern people saw in it the removal of a great
-menace to slavery; it appealed to the humane sentiments
-of the North, for it seemed to say to
-the free people, “Now we are going to give you
-an opportunity, and will materially aid you to found
-a government of your own on the soil of Africa.”
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_146'>146</span>To some of the Negroes this policy appeared fair
-and generous, especially when they considered the
-extent to which, by popular prejudice, they were
-shut out from the rights and benefits supposed to be
-the natural heritage of all American citizens. Certain
-it is that nothing concerning the Negro had, up
-to this time, been proposed in which men of the
-North and South met so nearly on common ground.
-In 1834, such names as James Madison, Chief Justice
-Marshall, General Lafayette, Henry Clay, Daniel
-Webster, and Gerrit Smith were enrolled among
-the officers of the society. But in spite of the distinguished
-character of those who were associated
-with the movement, it was thought by many that
-the propaganda carried on by the Colonization Society
-did much to increase the prejudice against the
-colored people. The following extracts from some
-of the speeches of its members and friends, and
-from its documents and publications, show the pro-slavery
-spirit of the society:</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Henry Clay said: “The emancipated slave
-should be removed. This is a condition indispensable.
-Expense of expatriation is to be defrayed
-by a fund to be derived from the labor of each freedman.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Judge Bullock of Kentucky said: “He [the
-colored man] is an exotic that does not and cannot
-flourish on American soil. There is no place for
-him in this country. It is not their land, and they
-cannot be made at home here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><cite>The Colonization Journal</cite> said: “You cannot
-abolish slavery, for God is pledged to sustain it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_147'>147</span>“Policy, and even the voice of humanity, forbid
-the progress of manumission. It would be as humane
-to throw them from the decks in the Middle
-Passage as to set them free in this country. Free
-blacks are a greater nuisance than slaves. This
-class of persons is a curse and a contagion where
-they reside.”—<cite>Colonization Report</cite>, iv, 261.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“An anomalous race of beings, the most depraved
-on earth.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“They constitute a class by themselves, out of
-which no individual can be elevated and below
-which none can be depressed. Even necessity
-places them in a class of degraded beings.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“Christianity cannot do for them here what it
-will do for them in Africa. This is no fault of the
-colored man, nor the white man, but an ordinance
-of Providence, and no more to be changed than the
-laws of motion.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“If the free people of color were generally taught
-to read, it might be an inducement for them to remain
-in this country. We should offer them no
-such inducement.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“It must appear evident to all&#160;... that
-measures calculated to bind the colored people to
-this country and seeking to raise them to a level
-with the whites, whether by founding colleges or in
-any other way, tends directly to counteract and
-thwart the whole plan of colonization.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Such were the teachings and spirit of the American
-Colonization Society at that time. The effect
-was naturally and necessarily brought home, in some
-form or other, to every colored man, woman, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_148'>148</span>child in the free-states. Justifying, as it did, an
-already existing prejudice, its tendency was, everywhere
-and in every direction, to bring about a narrowing
-of opportunities. Thus, there soon sprang
-up an active opposition to the society and its purposes.
-The anti-slavery members withdrew their
-support when they saw that the organization was
-almost wholly pro-slavery in spirit and purpose.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Meanwhile, the colored people began to show
-themselves worthy of respect in the efforts they
-were making to improve their own condition.
-It could not be denied that, in those Northern states
-where he was given an opportunity to work, the
-Negro was, on the whole, a peaceful, loyal, law-abiding,
-and industrious citizen. In spite of the
-might of all the forces against him, he doggedly
-persisted in his determination to be a man, to win a
-right to remain in this country, and to deserve the
-privileges of citizenship therein. No race under
-like conditions ever exhibited greater patience and
-faith in the ultimate triumph of right over wrong.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In times of war the Negro was instantly ready to
-sacrifice himself for the good of his country. As
-sailor or soldier, no commander ever had occasion
-to complain of his courage or lack of soldierly
-qualities. Just before the battle of New Orleans,
-in the winter of 1814, General Jackson, through
-his Adjutant General, made the following stirring
-address to his black soldiers:</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“To the Men of Color—Soldiers: From the
-shores of Mobile I called you to arms, I invited
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_149'>149</span>you to share the perils, and to divide the glory with
-your white countrymen. I expected much from
-you, for I was not unmindful of those qualities
-which must render you so formidable to an invading
-foe. I knew that you could endure hunger and
-thirst and all the hardships of war. I knew that
-you loved the land of your nativity, and that, like
-ourselves, you had to defend all that was most dear
-to man, but you surpassed my hopes. I have found
-in you, united to these qualities, that noble enthusiasm
-which impels to great deeds.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“Soldiers! The President of the United States
-shall be informed of your conduct on the present occasion
-and the voice of the representatives of the
-American nation shall applaud your valor, as your
-general now praises your valor.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The black heroes of New Orleans nobly won a
-place on the roll of honor, among those who strove
-for the protection and preservation of the American
-republic.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In the arts of peace and in the every-day struggles
-to live and survive the forces that made for his
-degradation, the Negro showed a courage and a disposition
-altogether creditable. While many were
-thinking that the black people were hopelessly incapable
-of absorbing American civilization, the latter
-were building churches of their own and organizing
-the great African Methodist Episcopal Zion,
-and the Colored Methodist Episcopal Church.
-These have steadily grown in membership until they
-have come to be numbered among the great religious
-bodies of the Christian world. They also
-founded and developed a Baptist organization which,
-with its schools, colleges, and missions, is regarded
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_150'>150</span>as one of the important civilizing agencies of the
-country.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>What the colored people accomplished for themselves,
-in their great religious associations and under
-so many hindering influences, is of far greater importance
-than is generally understood, or recognized
-by the American people. To the restraining and
-humanizing forces of these religious bodies, is
-largely due the peaceful and law-abiding character
-of the Negro population. In those critical periods
-of our history a race with passions less in restraint
-might have caused no end of trouble and bloodshed.
-These efforts of the free colored people of the North
-to improve their condition by means of religious
-training, were accompanied by endeavors to provide
-themselves with the facilities for secular education.
-There was never a time in the history of the
-American Negro when he did not show an eagerness
-to learn. Whether on the plantation in the far
-South, where ignorance in the slave was slavery’s
-only security, or in the northern states, where
-schools were closed against him by popular prejudice,
-he was always struggling, by night and by
-day, to obtain an education. The most important
-and creditable thing in his career as slave or freeman,
-and the most striking thing in his achievements,
-is his passion and struggle to lift from himself
-and his race the dark mantle of ignorance.
-This persistent determination to be educated has
-won for him more consideration and more friends
-among the white race, than any other one trait.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>When practically every school, public and private,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_151'>151</span>closed its doors against the admission of a
-Negro child, these courageous people tried to establish
-schools of their own. In every Northern
-community where there were colored persons some
-way was provided for their education. Sometimes
-classes would meet in a private house, like that of
-Primus Hall in Boston; at other times in a Negro
-church, and often in a barn. In these early efforts
-to furnish means of education, in spite of the protest
-of white neighbors, there was exhibited fine
-courage, impressive sacrifice, and rare consecration.
-Here the Negro was always at his best. Such men
-as Primus Hall and the Ruffins in Massachusetts;
-Nelson Wells in Maryland; John F. Ganes and
-Peter H. Clark in Ohio; John F. Cook in Washington;
-John Peterson in New York; Thomas and
-Fannie Jackson Coppin in Pennsylvania, all noble
-types of men and women, saw to it that ways
-and means for the education of the children of their
-day and generation should be provided. Hundreds
-of the best types of white men and women became
-interested in the education of the Negro as a result
-of his own persistent efforts in this direction. Some
-of these friends gave themselves as teachers, while
-others gave money for the founding and sustaining
-of schools and colleges. A few of those started at
-this early period, still live, many colored men and
-women, who have since become prominent in public
-affairs, having received their education in these establishments.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>One of the most interesting of these schools that
-have survived the revolution of conditions is the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_152'>152</span>“Institute for Colored Youth,” founded in Philadelphia
-in 1837, from funds bequeathed for that purpose
-by Richard Humphrey. The trustees were instructed
-to establish an institution “for the education
-of the descendants of the African race in school
-learning, in the various branches of the mechanical
-arts and trades and agriculture.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In the preamble of the constitution, the following
-language is used:</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“We believe that the most successful method of
-elevating the moral and intellectual character of
-the descendants of Africa, as well as improving their
-social condition, is to extend to them the benefits of
-a good education, and instruct them in the knowledge
-of some useful trade or business whereby they
-may be enabled to obtain a comfortable livelihood
-by their own industry; and through these means to
-prepare themselves for fulfilling the various duties
-of domestic and social life with reputation and
-fidelity, as good citizens and pious men.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>This school has recently been reorganized and considerably
-enlarged, and removed to Cheyney, Pa.,
-near Philadelphia, the work being entrusted to
-Hugh M. Browne, an educator of proved worth and
-responsibility. It starts out upon a career of increased
-usefulness, with the express purpose of fitting
-teachers for their appointed work.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The men and women who have graduated from
-the Institute have more than justified the generosity
-of its founder, and they have likewise reflected the
-unexampled excellence as a teacher of Mrs. Fannie
-Jackson Coppin, an early graduate of Oberlin, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_153'>153</span>one of the first principals of this famous school in
-Philadelphia. Her influence on the lives and
-careers of many prominent men and women of the
-Negro race is quite beyond comparison with that of
-any other of our early Negro educators.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Charlotte L. Fortin, now Mrs. Frank J. Grimké,
-Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, and Mary Ann
-Shadd Carey must always be mentioned among the
-men and women whose devotion to the education of
-the members of their race has made the American
-people recognize the justice and the usefulness of
-giving the Negro the teaching he so earnestly
-desires.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The lack of economic and industrial opportunities
-of the free colored people, prior to the Civil War,
-can be easily inferred from what has already been
-said concerning the general sentiment of proscription
-that prevailed. As a general rule, they were
-not allowed to work at any of the trades and their
-children were not accepted as apprentices. It has
-already been noticed how impossible it was for Mr.
-Douglass, even in Massachusetts, to follow his occupation
-as a ship-calker, although, as we have seen,
-he had no trouble in obtaining good employment in
-Baltimore.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>But the Negro, in this as in matters of education,
-persisted in his effort to learn trades and to work
-at them. There were in the free-states a considerable
-number of colored mechanics. Many of them
-had fitted themselves for their work while in slavery,
-and either by self-purchase or as runaways, had obtained
-their freedom. From these mechanics the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_154'>154</span>trades were passed along to others by apprenticeships.
-In this way colored men entered and maintained
-themselves in many employments. There
-were always some people who were willing to hire
-skilled Negro mechanics. In cities like Philadelphia,
-they were, for a time, important factors in the
-industrial life. Indeed, long before slavery was
-abolished, every large northern city had a certain
-number of enterprising individuals who had succeeded
-in establishing themselves in some of the
-trades. In many communities they were making
-commendable headway as contractors, caterers, shopkeepers,
-tailors, shoemakers, and barbers. Not a
-few of them accumulated small fortunes. A number
-too had built up enviable reputations in the professions,
-especially in medicine, the ministry, and
-journalism. Some obtained their education in England,
-but most of them managed to get their training
-in this country.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In all this activity and enterprise they were not
-without leaders of force and intelligence. In the period
-covered by the anti-slavery movement, there was
-a remarkable group of aggressive and influential colored
-agitators. Without attempting to name all the
-prominent men who coöperated with Mr. Douglass
-in the anti-slavery warfare, we should mention a
-few, in order to make complete any account of the
-struggle in which their leader was so heroically
-engaged. Henry Highland Garnet of New York,
-was a gifted and thoroughly educated man. He was
-a Presbyterian minister and as such held an influential
-position, being elected at one time as a delegate
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_155'>155</span>to a Peace Conference at Frankfort, Germany.
-Charles Lennox Remond, Dr. James McCune
-Smith, Samuel R. Ward, H. Ford Douglass, Martin
-R. Delaney, John M. Langston, J. Howard Day,
-and Mifflin W. Gibbs, were men of rare oratorical
-gifts and were heard and admired on every great
-anti-slavery occasion. Robert Purvis, of Philadelphia,
-would have held a high place in any age, and
-the cause of freedom would have suffered without
-his aid. He was a man of patrician manners and
-had all the instincts of an aristocrat. He was for
-many years, vice-president of the National Anti-Slavery
-Society, and he enjoyed the intimate acquaintance
-and association of some of the most eminent
-men of his time.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>It would scarcely be possible to write a history of
-the anti-slavery movement without mentioning the
-work of William Still. He had the rare powers of
-heart and mind that gave him an interest in and a
-large grasp of affairs. He was one of the original
-stockholders of <cite>The Nation</cite>, and a close friend of John
-Brown’s. It was at his house that the latter’s family
-were concealed after the Harper’s Ferry tragedy.
-Mr. Still’s contribution to the literature of the anti-slavery
-cause has a special value and is nowhere
-duplicated.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>These colored men, who were associated with Mr.
-Douglass, got their training in the school of adversity.
-They were permitted to share few of the
-joys of life. Men of strong faith, they spent themselves
-in the service of their people. When the history
-of the Negro in America comes finally to be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_156'>156</span>written and scholars seek to tell the story of the
-curious problem in civilization which his presence
-here creates, these dark-skinned heroes of an unpopular
-race may find their place in the ranks of those
-who helped to benefit the world.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_157'>157</span>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER IX<br> <span class='large'>THE UNDERGROUND RAILWAY AND THE FUGITIVE SLAVE LAW</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c003'>Pro-slavery and anti-slavery were at this time
-the names of two sets of ideas and two states of mind
-that no longer admitted of compromise. The words
-meant immeasurably more in 1850 than they had
-in 1830. If they had ever been mere academic
-terms, they were fast becoming fighting terms,—the
-standards of two hostile camps. In the minds
-of the people, they stood, respectively, for irreconcilable
-principles. With every fresh event affecting
-either one side or the other, new and more
-intense animosities were engendered, and the two
-forces were driven farther and farther apart. Those
-who believed in the institution, became more and
-more firmly fixed in their determination not only to
-resist every attack upon it, but to give it the widest
-possible extension. Those who stood opposed to
-slavery were equally fixed in their determination
-that it should be destroyed.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The anti-slavery movement was fast becoming
-something more than a sentiment or an opinion with
-which one might try conclusions in the forum. It
-was fast becoming a revolutionary movement which
-meant force, more force, and, finally, the utmost
-force. All the time Frederick Douglass, like William
-Lloyd Garrison, was in the forward ranks.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_158'>158</span>The tone of “no compromise” rang out with increasing
-insistence.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“Come what will,” said Douglass, “I hold it to
-be morally certain that sooner or later, by fair
-means or foul means, in peace or in blood, in judgment
-or in mercy, slavery is doomed to cease out of
-this otherwise goodly land, and liberty is destined
-to become the settled law of the republic.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“I am in earnest,” said Garrison, “I will not
-equivocate, I will not excuse, I will not retract a
-single inch, and I will be heard.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>These declarations by these two conspicuous
-Abolitionists are aptly expressive of the growing intensity
-of the anti-slavery feeling. Such words
-called more loudly for action than for argument.
-What was known in the United States during the
-anti-slavery struggle as the “Underground Railway,”
-best represents all that was aggressive and
-militant in that contest. This so-called “railway
-system” was constituted and operated in defiance of
-law by the Abolitionists. It was Abolition in action.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>But if the Underground Railway was conducted
-in defiance of law, it should be said that the law in
-its terms, spirit, and effects seemed to them who
-were engaged in operating the road to be in defiance
-of those principles of liberty and the rights of man,
-which they had been taught to think were higher
-than any positive enactment of a legislature.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The Underground Railway had none of the features
-of the modern railway, except the carrying of
-passengers, and these were limited in kind and in
-the direction of the travel. No one could obtain
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_159'>159</span>passage on this road, unless he or she were a slave,
-and wanted to be free. The trains ran in but one
-direction, and that was Northward. There were no
-“Jim Crow” cars, no sleepers and no smokers, and
-all passengers were carried free of charge. It was
-a railroad without stockholders, but it had innumerable
-directors. No dividends were paid except
-to passengers, and such dividends were in the form
-of certificates of freedom from bondage.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>To be more explicit, the Underground Railway
-was a system of clandestine travel, extending from
-the borders of “Mason and Dixon’s Line” through
-the North and West to Canada. The residence of
-Mr. Douglass was one of the last stations on the line
-before reaching British soil. Much has been written
-about this mysterious railway, but the details
-of its activities have never been told. From September
-26, 1850, to the breaking out of the Civil
-War, the new and rigid Fugitive Slave Law was in
-active operation, and it was in open violation of
-this measure that the Underground Railway was
-conducted. A slave, and sometimes an entire family
-or body of slaves, would make the dash for liberty,
-escaping across the borders of Maryland into Pennsylvania.
-There they found themselves in the hands
-of friendly Quakers, who piloted them by night to
-other stations, where they were secreted until a favorable
-opportunity presented itself to push them
-along farther north.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Mr. Douglass’s house in Rochester was a large
-three-story frame structure, situated in the centre of
-four acres of land on South Avenue, two miles
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_160'>160</span>from the business portion of the city. It stood out by
-itself, the nearest residence being fully five hundred
-feet away to the north. This was the objective
-point, before reaching Canada, for many slaves fleeing
-from the South. The tales of privation and
-suffering told by these men, women, and children
-who escaped half-clad, encountering in the wintertime
-snow-drifts and zero weather, made a profound
-impression on the people of the North through
-whose towns they passed and in whose homes they
-constantly sought protection. Thus it was that
-many a Northern farmer, convinced, it may be, of
-the right or expediency of slavery, found himself
-compelled, from motives of common humanity, to
-open his doors to these refugees, and grant their appeals
-for food and shelter. Many a cold winter
-night has a knock come to Mr. Douglass’s door,
-when a white-faced stranger, covered with frost and
-snow, would announce in whispered tones that he
-had a sleigh full of runaway Negroes <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">en route</span></i> for
-Canada. Mr. Douglass, or Mrs. Douglass in her
-husband’s absence, calling the boys, Lewis, Fred
-and Charles, would have fires started in that part
-of the house where fugitives were hidden away, and
-at an opportune time they were taken to Charlotte,
-seven miles from Rochester, and placed aboard a
-Lake Ontario steamer for Canada. These friendly
-white farmers had to hasten on for fear of detection,
-which meant terrible penalties. Thus it will
-be seen that the risks which their sympathy for
-the slave led them to take were very serious.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>It required large sums of money to keep this Underground
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_161'>161</span>Railway system in motion. The runaways
-must be fed, clothed, and their passage paid
-across the lake to Canada. Mr. Douglass was in the
-lecture-field most of the time to raise money to do
-his part. The Female Anti-Slavery Society, with
-its branches throughout the North, solicited funds
-and clothing, and, as these unfortunate fugitives
-were invariably destitute, means had to be supplied
-them until they could secure employment under
-the British flag.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Besides William Still of Philadelphia, among colored
-people, Mr. Douglass had the active coöperation
-of Dr. James McCune Smith, of New York;
-Stephen J. Myers, of Albany; William Rich, of
-Troy, and Rev. J. W. Loguen, of Syracuse. Many
-others actively assisted in the work, including
-Charles Lennox Remond, William Whipper, of
-Philadelphia; Thomas L. Dorsey, Rev. Henry
-Highland Garnet, Anthony Barrier, of Brockport,
-N. Y., and Thomas Downing, of New York. There
-were not a few clashes with the law in efforts to capture
-and return escaping slaves, but only two or
-three such attempts were successful.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Mr. Douglass’s home was always considered an
-asylum for runaways, and was constantly under the
-surveillance of the United States marshals; nevertheless,
-not a single fugitive, after reaching him,
-was ever apprehended and carried back. The majority
-of the escapes were made in winter, when the
-oversight on the plantation was less rigid than in
-the working-season, and many who were given
-passes during the Christmas holidays to visit neighboring
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_162'>162</span>towns or plantations, seized that opportunity
-for a longer journey.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The western and southwestern branch of the
-Underground Railway was operated from Cincinnati,
-O., and through Michigan to Canada. Fugitive
-slaves from Kentucky, Tennessee, Mississippi,
-Arkansas, and Louisiana took this latter route.
-The whole number of slaves who successfully made
-their escape through the system has never been ascertained.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The thousands of men, women, and children,
-white and black, who had a hand in conducting
-this Underground Railway were less concerned
-about the statistics of their dangerous work than
-they were with results. That the number of slaves
-set free by the operation of the system ran up into
-the thousands, was evident from the vast army
-of people in all parts of the North engaged in
-the work, and the constantly increasing colored
-population in the free-states and Canada. There
-was scarcely a day or night when some black man
-or woman did not defy the perils of the journey
-and elude the vigilance of the law to find free soil.
-So persistent were these enslaved people in running
-away from bondage that they excited not merely the
-sympathy but often the admiration of those not
-otherwise interested in their cause. The perils and
-adventures of these sombre fugitives stirred the
-blood and touched the heart. William Still’s volume
-of nearly eight hundred pages, contains a
-carefully kept record of the experiences of those
-runaways who came under the immediate observation
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_163'>163</span>and direction of the “Vigilance Committee”
-of the Pennsylvania Anti-Slavery Society. Their
-resourcefulness, cleverness, and daring revealed to
-the Northern people an unsuspected quality in the
-Negro character.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The stories of these fugitives, told in their own
-simple-hearted way, and attested by the hardships
-that they had undergone, were, to those who heard
-them, a revelation of conditions in the South, of
-which they had hitherto known only at secondhand.
-They might still doubt the expediency of
-granting freedom to the slave but they could no
-longer question the sincerity of his desire for liberty
-and with that desire they were compelled to sympathize.
-As Douglass said: “Men were better than
-their theology, and truer to humanity than their
-politics or their offices.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The manner of Douglass’s flight—riding out of
-Baltimore and Maryland in daylight and in sight of
-those who knew that he was a slave—is a good illustration
-of the boldness and ingenuity of some of
-the escapes. Among the hundreds of interesting
-cases cited by Mr. Still is that of William Crafts,
-who gained his liberty by acting the part of a valet
-or body-servant of his wife. She was of light brown
-complexion, and for this adventure wore men’s
-clothing. Another case is that of a slave-woman
-who hitched up her master’s horse and carriage and,
-taking her family of five children and several
-others, drove off to liberty. Box Brown was the
-name of a slave, who permitted himself to be nailed
-up in a box and sent by express to Baltimore. Two
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_164'>164</span>colored women dressed themselves in deep mourning
-and rode Northward to freedom in the same
-coach as their masters, who did not know them.
-In some cases slaves secreted themselves for several
-months and, when search for them had ceased, crept
-off unsuspected. In hundreds of instances, the parts
-were as cleverly played as if the fugitives had had
-special training in the drama of running away from
-their masters. In nearly all cases these black men
-and women took desperate chances. The conductors
-of the Underground Railway were everywhere,
-and at all times on the alert. They knew every
-path, the byways and highways in which slaves
-might hide or on which they might travel to reach
-freedom. The stations were always ready and open
-to receive them. It was never too late, or too early,
-or too difficult, or too perilous to be on the lookout
-to welcome, protect, and pass on fugitives to the next
-place of safety. Clothing, food, shoes, carriages,
-wagons, horses, and mules were always at hand.
-No secret society has ever veiled its proceedings in
-deeper mystery than this widely separated army of
-determined conspirators and emancipators. The
-secret service men of the government tried to locate
-the stations and the station-agents, but the more
-they searched, the less they found. It is a curious
-fact that the United States secret service men seem
-to have had just as little success in uncovering the
-systematic plans for aiding slaves to escape to the
-Northern states as in preventing the smuggling of
-slaves from Africa into the Southern states. The
-traffic of the Underground Railroad continued to increase
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_165'>165</span>in volume and the slave once off United States
-soil was beyond reach or recall.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Some of the men and women who were carrying
-on this clandestine work of delivering fugitives were
-people of much prominence. Among them were
-members of Congress, distinguished clergymen,
-editors, prominent merchants, doctors, lawyers,
-farmers, and tradesmen. From the slave-holders’
-standpoint, the situation was not encouraging.
-They rightly felt that unless something effective
-were done to stop this increasing loss, slave-labor
-would cease to be profitable. This condition of
-things required a remedy, a remedy more far-reaching
-than any guaranteed the slave-holding system
-under the law then existing. To meet these attempts
-of the Abolitionists to undermine the system, the
-pro-slavery leaders deemed it just and necessary to
-extend the arm of national power to reclaim and
-carry back to bondage every slave who reached a
-free state in quest of liberty. The government that
-sanctioned slavery as a national institution; that acquired
-new territory for the extension of slavery;
-that derived a goodly part of its revenue from it,
-was bound, they believed, to do what was necessary
-to make slavery more secure. Until the Underground
-Railway began to do so large a business,
-there was thought to be enough law in the Constitution
-of the United States.<a id='r3'></a><a href='#f3' class='c017'><sup>[3]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f3'>
-<p class='c004'><a href='#r3'>3</a>. As provided in Article IV, Section 2: “No person held
-to service in one state, under the laws thereof, escaping to another
-state, in consequence of any law or regulation therein,
-shall be discharged from such service or labor, but shall be delivered
-up on the claim of the party to whom such service or
-labor may be due,” supplemented by the statute giving force to
-its provisions in 1793.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_166'>166</span>The constitutionality of this law had been fully
-upheld by the Supreme Court in what was known as
-the “Prigg case,” wherein Justice Story declared
-that it was self-executing, so that an owner could
-seize and carry away his runaway slave wherever
-he found him, providing he could do so without
-breach of the public peace. Those who desired and
-demanded more legal provisions for the better protection
-of slavery were in absolute power North and
-South. Daniel Webster of Massachusetts was as
-much in favor of it as Henry Clay of Kentucky and
-Calhoun of South Carolina; and in response to
-popular demand, the new Fugitive Slave Law was
-passed on September 10, 1850, as a part of the great
-Compromise Measures of that year.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The instrument was most carefully drawn, and
-covered ten sections. Those who worked out its
-carefully-worded provisions had evidently studied
-the Underground System with considerable care, and
-this law was framed to meet the conditions that the
-railroad had created. Some of its main features
-were as follows:—</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>A United States Commission and a United States
-court should have concurrent jurisdiction in disposing
-of cases of fugitive slaves brought before them.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>Any postmaster or clerk could be appointed a
-commissioner to hear cases under the law.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>A United States marshal was under penalty of
-$1,000 for refusing or neglecting to make an arrest
-when called upon to do so.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_167'>167</span>Fugitive slaves could be arrested, with or without
-warrant and taken before a commissioner or judge,
-who was empowered to dispose of the case forthwith.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>If a fugitive escaped from a United States marshal,
-the latter could be sued on his bond and the full
-value of the slave recovered.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>There was a penalty of five years in prison or a
-fine of $5,000 for aiding or abetting a slave’s escape.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The only proof needed was an affidavit by the alleged
-owner or some one acting in his behalf alleging
-right of property, escape or service due on
-escape, and a description of the person arrested,
-certified to by the magistrate.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>There were provisions for military aid for the
-United States marshal in case of resistance.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The commissioner received a larger fee in case
-of extradition than he would obtain in case of discharge.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The slave thus arrested could not testify in his
-own behalf and was not allowed a jury trial.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The first effect of the law was to create a panic
-and stampede among the colored people of the free-states.
-It looked for awhile as if every Negro resident
-north of the Ohio had lost faith in the tenure
-of his own title to himself. There was wholesale
-emigration to Canada of colored people from every
-part of the United States. In his Life of Frederick
-Douglass, Mr. Holland gives an account of
-forty Negroes of Boston, who left home within three
-days after the Fugitive Slave Law was passed. The
-pastor of a colored church and his entire membership
-of 112 persons fled to British soil. A number
-of talented men who had done service in the anti-slavery
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_168'>168</span>cause, went to England. Mr. Douglass, who
-was in close touch with every movement, every fear,
-and every secret purpose of his people, says:</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“I was compelled to witness the terribly distressing
-effects of this cruel enactment; fugitive slaves,
-who had lived for many years safely and securely in
-western New York and elsewhere, some of whom
-by industry and economy had saved some money
-and bought little homes for themselves and their
-children, were suddenly alarmed and compelled to
-flee to Canada. Even colored people who had been
-free all their lives felt very insecure in their freedom,
-for under this law the oaths of any two villains
-were sufficient to confine a free man to slavery for
-life.... Although I was now free myself,
-I was not without apprehension. My pardon was
-of doubtful validity, having been bought when out
-of possession of my owner, and when he must take
-what was given or not at all.... From
-rumors that reached me, my house was guarded by
-my friends several nights.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>A much more serious consequence of the Fugitive
-Slave Law was the altogether unexpected feeling of
-resentment aroused in the North by its enforcement.
-There was abundant willingness among the Northern
-people that the slave-holders should have their
-slaves and that they should have everything needed
-to protect and make secure their property rights in
-them; but when it came to pressing unwilling citizens
-into the service of men who were hunting
-slaves, there was a very natural revulsion of sentiment.
-Just how intense was this feeling may best
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_169'>169</span>be illustrated in the history of three different cases
-that created wide-spread interest at the time. These
-were known respectively as the Burns, Shadrach,
-and Thomas Sims cases.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Anthony Burns had made his escape from his
-master in Virginia and in 1854 was living in Boston.
-In the month of May he was arrested under the provisions
-of the Fugitive Slave Law. At this particular
-time, Boston was aroused because of the passage
-of the Kansas-Nebraska Bill, repealing the Missouri
-Compromise, and thereby permitting the extension
-of slavery in the western territories. Burns was
-confined in the Boston court-house under strong
-guard. The people were in a mood to become profoundly
-interested in his case, which presented itself
-to them as an illustration of the cruelties of slavery
-and of the Fugitive Slave Law. Wendell Phillips,
-Theodore Parker, Richard A. Davis, Charles M.
-Ellis, Thomas Wentworth Higginson, and many
-others equally prominent, gave practical effect to
-this interest by securing a postponement of the hearing
-for a few days. In the meantime, a meeting was
-called in Faneuil Hall in which feeling ran high.
-While it was in progress, Colonel Higginson led in
-an attempt to rescue Burns. The door of the jail
-was battered in, the deputy was killed, and the
-Colonel and others were wounded. When the case
-came up for a hearing before Commissioner Loring,
-Burns had the best counsel that Boston could afford,
-but like all cases under the Fugitive Slave Law,
-there was no escape. After the formalities were
-complied with, he was ordered back to his master.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_170'>170</span>When this decision became known, many houses
-were draped in black and so intense was the public
-feeling against it, that the government directed
-that Burns should be returned in a United States
-revenue cutter. He was escorted to the wharf by a
-strong guard and the streets were thronged with
-Boston citizens in a great state of excitement.
-There seemed to be no possible escape from a bloody
-riot. When the water-side was reached and an outbreak
-was imminent, a minister named Foster cried
-out, “Let us pray,” and with this call for prayer
-silence fell upon the excited throng; but the law had
-its way and Burns was sent back.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The case of Shadrach was less exciting, but is interesting
-as presenting another and different view of
-the sentiment excited by the Fugitive Slave Law.
-He was a fugitive and a resident of Boston. He
-had been arrested in February, 1851, and during a
-postponement of his hearing before the United States
-Commissioner, the Boston Abolitionists rescued him
-and got him into Canada, the land of safety. The
-government officials in Washington took serious
-notice of this rescue of a United States prisoner and
-the uproar that followed seemed altogether out of
-proportion to the incident. Commenting on the excitement
-at the capital at this apparent determination
-of Boston to defy the national government, Mr.
-Garrison wrote:</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“The head and front of the offending in this instance—what
-is it? A sudden rush of a score or
-two of unarmed friends of equal liberty—an uninjurious
-deliverance of the oppressed out of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_171'>171</span>hands of the oppressor—the quiet transportation of
-a slave out of this slavery-ruled land to the free
-soil of Upper Canada&#160;... a solitary slave in
-Boston is plucked as a brand from the burning, and
-forthwith a Cabinet Council is held and behold a
-menacing proclamation!”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Senator Henry Clay was “horrified” and proposed
-an inquiry as to the expediency of passing
-an additional law making it a penal offense in the
-nature of treason for any one to interfere with the
-smooth and peaceful exercise of his pet measure
-in the Compromise Bill. Mr. Webster declared
-that the rescue of Shadrach was “strictly speaking”
-treason.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Scarcely had the United States grand jury finished
-its examination of the Shadrach case when Boston
-was again in the midst of an excitement over the
-arrest and extradition of another fugitive slave,
-Thomas Sims. Profiting by the failure to send
-Shadrach back to his master, the officials had taken
-extraordinary precautions to prevent a rescue by
-mob or otherwise. The court-house where Sims
-was imprisoned was surrounded by chains and
-guarded by a large part of the city police force. As
-a further precaution, the state militia was called
-out and kept in readiness to quell a possible riot.
-A part of this soldiery furnished an escort all the
-way to Savannah, where the prisoner-slave was delivered
-safely.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The bloody resistance on the part of runaways at
-Christiana, Pa., did more than anything else, in the
-opinion of Mr. Douglass, to put a check on the execution
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_172'>172</span>of the law. At this place three colored men
-were pursued by officers, and, when hard-pressed,
-turned about, shot, and killed a Mr. Gorsuch,
-wounded his son, drove back the officers, and then
-made their escape to Rochester, where they were
-rescued and given shelter in Mr. Douglass’s house.
-The latter, with his assistants, finally smuggled
-these fugitives to the Canadian shores, but in doing
-so he imperiled his own safety to a greater extent
-than ever before, because he was not only harboring
-fugitives from slavery, but fugitives from justice.
-After this experience, the law became a dead letter.
-It not only intended to put an end to the business of
-the Underground Railroad, but to make every community
-in some degree responsible for the return of
-runaway slaves, and it proved to be one of the most
-unpopular and irritating pieces of legislation enacted
-by the Federal Government. This act, more
-than any other one thing, increased opposition to
-slavery. Thousands of people who were either indifferent
-or hostile to the anti-slavery cause, flocked
-to the ranks of the Abolitionists when they saw
-what it meant and whither it was leading the nation.
-The language used by the leaders, both in
-their publications and on the stump, became more
-bitter and defiant.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Mr. Douglass was always in the storm-centre of
-every movement to thwart the execution of this
-measure. He was in Boston, and in continuous conference
-with Theodore Parker, Higginson, Garrison,
-and others belonging to the “vigilance” committees.
-It was in these meetings that Douglass says
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_173'>173</span>he “got a peep into Parker’s soul.” He characterized
-him as “a man who shrank from no opportunity
-to do his full duty when man’s liberty was
-threatened.” Mr. Douglass’s thorough and comprehensive
-understanding of each succeeding change in
-the development of the slavery question was generally
-recognized by friend and foe. When he was
-invited by the members of the New York state legislature
-to address them on the subject, he was selected
-because no man then living could speak with
-a fuller knowledge of the great issue.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Belonging to this period of increasing antagonism
-between pro-slavery and anti-slavery parties
-was the decision in the Dred Scott case. This, the
-Fugitive Slave Law, and the Kansas-Nebraska Bill,
-taken together, represent the sum of the conservative
-forces in the nation opposed to the Abolitionists
-and their cause. Douglass’s opinion of the
-situation, as it concerned himself and his people,
-is voiced in the following extract from an address
-delivered at New York in May, 1857:</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“I am myself not insensible to the many difficulties
-that beset us on every hand. They fling their
-broad and gloomy shadows across the pathway of
-every thoughtful colored man in this country. For
-one, I see them clearly and feel them sadly. Standing,
-as it were, barefoot, and treading upon the
-sharp and flinty rocks of the present, and looking
-out upon the boundless sea of the future, I have
-sought in my humble way to penetrate the intervening
-mists and clouds, and, perchance, to descry in the
-dim and shadowy distance the white flag of freedom.”</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_174'>174</span>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER X<br> <span class='large'>DOUGLASS, HARRIET BEECHER STOWE AND JOHN BROWN</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c003'>The anti-slavery agitation made and revealed
-some of the most notable characters in American
-history. As it grew in extent and intensity, it attracted
-to itself men and women gifted with the
-powers needed to force great issues to a conclusion.
-Those who were already in the struggle, like Mr.
-Douglass, became more strongly committed to it,
-and those who were not yet enlisted, but belonged
-to it by right of individual temperament and spiritual
-inheritance, hurriedly took their places in the
-foremost ranks of responsibility and action.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>There was no such thing as indifference in this
-matter. For those who understood the vast issue
-there were grave questions involved, and in
-some form or other the right or wrong of it knocked
-at the door of every one’s mind and conscience.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>To those who were sufficiently gifted to say and
-do anything great concerning this cause, the opportunity
-was now at hand. In the midst of the confusion
-and controversy, the public was ready to
-listen to some clear voice that would tell it the facts
-in regard to American slavery.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Harriet Beecher Stowe responded to this need
-and was inspired to recite the story of the Negro in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_175'>175</span>America. This she did with a mastery and a fascination
-that commanded the widest reading ever yet
-given to an American book. She so stirred the
-hearts of the Northern people that a large part of
-them were ready either to vote, or, in the last extremity,
-to fight for the suppression of slavery.
-The value of <cite>Uncle Tom’s Cabin</cite> to the cause of Abolition
-can never be justly estimated.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Mrs. Stowe was a member of the great Beecher
-family, and was by inheritance, as well as by special
-inspiration, peculiarly fitted to perform this service.
-She developed a concern in the slavery question in
-the natural course of her interest in all questions of
-the time. She lived for awhile in Cincinnati,
-where she was brought into close touch with some
-of the most cruel incidents of slavery,—the flight
-and capture of fugitives. Her sensitive nature was
-stung by seeing men hunted through the streets of
-the city, and carried back into bondage. She was
-near the scene when Birney’s anti-slavery press was
-destroyed by the mob. The whole atmosphere about
-her was surcharged with the spirit of the controversy,
-and the more she learned of the issue,
-the deeper became her interest in it. Stirred by
-sympathy for those whom she had come to regard
-as the victims of a bad system, she determined to
-know everything that was possible to be known
-about it.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Crossing the Ohio River, Mrs. Stowe went down
-into the land of slavery, to study the institution at
-first hand. When she left the South and returned
-to New England with her husband, she saw and felt
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_176'>176</span>the evil as few in the North had ever seen and
-felt it.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>She soon discovered that the great mass of the
-Northern people were not able to share her views.
-She found most of them either indifferent or incredulous,
-and concluded that if they had had her
-experiences, they would also have her convictions.
-The immediate incentive to the writing of <cite>Uncle
-Tom’s Cabin</cite> was the desire to arouse the national
-conscience and bring the people to a sense of their
-responsibility. This remarkable story first appeared
-in an anti-slavery newspaper, and proved so popular
-that it was soon issued in book form. The
-rapidity with which one edition after another was
-published and consumed at home and abroad, was
-without precedent. The Abolitionists were quick
-to recognize the story as the most powerful engine
-that had yet been employed against slavery. Frederick
-Douglass thus speaks of its influence:</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“Nothing could have better suited the moral and
-humane requirements of the hour. Its effect was
-amazing, instantaneous, and universal. She [Mrs.
-Stowe] at once became the object of interest and
-admiration the world over.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The author was not only concerned for the well-being
-of those who were enslaved in the South, but
-was also intensely interested in those who were
-already free in the North. She looked to Mr.
-Douglass as the most eminent representative of the
-Negro race in the free-states, and before sailing for
-England, whither she had been invited by the
-people, who were anxious to show her some honors
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_177'>177</span>for what she had done, asked him to her home in
-Andover, Mass. He gladly accepted the invitation,
-and, in his <cite>Life and Times</cite>, gives the following
-account of his visit:</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“I was received at her home with genuine cordiality.
-There was no contradiction between the
-author and her book. Mrs. Stowe appeared in conversation
-equally well as she appeared in her
-writing. She made to me a nice little speech in announcing
-her object in sending for me: ‘I have
-invited you here,’ she said, ‘because I wish to confer
-with you as to what can be done for the free
-colored people of the country. I am going to England
-and expect to have a considerable sum of
-money placed in my hands, and I intend to use it in
-some way for the permanent good of the colored
-people and especially for that class which has become
-free by their own exertions. In what way to
-do this most successfully is the subject which I wish
-to talk with you about. In any event I desire to
-have some monument rise after <cite>Uncle Tom’s
-Cabin</cite>, which shall show that it produced more
-than a transient influence.’”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>They discussed at some length the condition of his
-people in the Northern states, and as a result both
-concluded that there should be established an “Industrial
-College,” where colored people could learn
-some of the useful handicrafts,—to work in iron,
-wood and leather—and where a good plain English
-education could also be obtained. Their poverty
-kept them ignorant, and ignorance kept them degraded.
-Mrs. Stowe became so much interested in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_178'>178</span>Mr. Douglass’s educational purposes that she asked
-him to submit his plans in writing, so that she
-could take them to England with her and show them
-to her friends. On his return to Rochester he
-elaborated his views, as she had requested. The
-plans were then shown to many of the leading
-Negroes who worked with him, and they very
-heartily approved. Later they were submitted to a
-convention of representative colored people in
-Rochester to receive the endorsement of that body.
-In this educational scheme, Mr. Douglass has given
-evidence of his understanding of the needs of the
-Negro in our generation, as well as of those in his
-own. The following is an extract from the statement
-which he sent to Mrs. Stowe in 1853:</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“The plan which I humbly submit in answer to
-this query is the establishment in Rochester, N. Y.,
-or in some other part of the United States, equally
-favorable to such an enterprise, of an Industrial
-College in which shall be taught several important
-branches of the mechanic arts. This college shall
-be open to colored youth. I will pass over the details
-of such an institution as I propose....
-Never having had a day’s schooling in all my life,
-I may not be expected to map out the details of a
-plan so comprehensive as that involved in the idea
-of a college. The argument in favor of an Industrial
-College, a college to be conducted by the best
-men and the best workmen which the mechanic
-arts can afford; where the colored youth can be instructed
-to use their hands, as well as their heads;
-where they can be put in possession of the means of
-getting a living, whether their lot in after-life may
-be cast among civilized or uncivilized men, whether
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_179'>179</span>they choose to stay here, or prefer to return to the
-land of their fathers, is briefly this: Prejudice
-against the free colored people in the North has nowhere
-shown itself so invincible as among mechanics.
-The farmer and the professional man
-cherish no feeling so bitter as that cherished by
-these. The latter would starve us out of the country
-entirely. At this moment I can more easily get my
-son into a lawyer’s office to study law than I can
-into a blacksmith’s shop to blow the bellows and to
-wield the sledge-hammer. Denied the means of
-learning the useful trades, we are pressed into the
-narrowest limits to obtain a livelihood. In times
-past we have been the hewers of wood and drawers
-of water for American society, and we once enjoyed
-a monopoly in menial employments, but this is so
-no longer. Even these employments are rapidly
-passing out of our hands. The fact is, that colored
-men must learn trades; must find new employments
-new modes of usefulness to society; or they must
-decay under the pressing wants to which their condition
-is rapidly bringing them.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“We must become mechanics; we must build as
-well as live in houses; we must make as well as use
-furniture; we must construct bridges as well as pass
-over them, before we can properly live or be respected
-by our fellow-men. We need mechanics as
-well as ministers. We need workers in iron, clay,
-and leather. We have orators, authors, and other
-professional men, but these reach only a certain
-class, and get respect for our race in certain select
-circles. To live here as we ought, we must fasten
-ourselves to our countrymen through their every-day
-cardinal wants. We must not only be able to black
-boots, but to make them. At present, in the
-Northern states, we are unknown as mechanics.
-We give no proof of genius or skill at the county,
-state, or national fairs.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_180'>180</span>“The fact that we make no show of our ability is
-held conclusive of <em>our inability to make any</em>, hence all
-the indifference and contempt with which incapacity
-is regarded fall upon us, and that too when we have
-had no means of disproving the infamous opinion of
-our natural inferiority. I have during the last
-dozen years denied before Americans that we are an
-inferior race, but this has been done by arguments
-based upon admitted principles rather than by the
-presentation of facts. Now, firmly believing as I
-do, that there are skill, invention, power, industry,
-and real mechanical genius among the colored
-people, which will bear favorable testimony for
-them, and which only need the means to develop
-them, I am decidedly in favor of the establishment
-of such a college as I have mentioned. The benefits
-of such an institution will not be confined to the
-Northern states nor to the free colored people. They
-would extend over the whole Union. The slave, not
-less than the freeman, would be benefited by such
-an institution. It must be confessed that the most
-powerful argument now used by the Southern slave-holder,
-and the one most soothing to his conscience,
-is that derived from the low condition of the free
-colored people of the North. I have long felt that
-too little attention has been given by our truest
-friends in this country, to removing this stumbling
-block out of the way of the slave’s liberation.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“The most telling, the most killing refutation of
-slavery is the presentation of an industrious, enterprising,
-thrifty and intelligent free black population.
-Such a population I believe would rise in the
-Northern states under the fostering care of such a
-college as that proposed.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“Allow me to say in conclusion that I believe
-every intelligent colored man in America will approve
-and rejoice at the establishment of some such
-institution as that now suggested. There are many
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_181'>181</span>respectable colored men, fathers of large families,
-having boys nearly grown, whose minds are tossed
-by night and by day with the anxious query, What
-shall I do with my boys? Such an institution would
-meet the wants of such persons. Then, too, the establishment
-of such an institution would be in character
-with the eminently practical philanthropy
-of your trans-Atlantic friends. America could
-scarcely object to it as an attempt to agitate the
-public mind on the subject of slavery, or to dissolve
-the Union. It could not be tortured into a
-cause for hard words by the American people, but
-the noble and good of all classes would see in the
-effort an excellent motive, a benevolent object temperately,
-wisely and practically manifested.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>It would hardly be possible to show in any better
-way the far-reaching and prophetic character of the
-mind of Frederick Douglass. This letter indicates
-very plainly that even before General Armstrong
-had formulated his plan of academic and industrial
-education, before Hampton Institute, and long before
-Tuskegee Institute was thought of, Frederick
-Douglass saw the necessity for just such work as
-many of the industrial schools are doing in the
-South at the present time.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>It is thus most pleasant to have the name of
-Douglass linked with the cause of industrial education.
-He believed not only in academic and college
-training but also in agricultural and mechanical
-education. Hampton, Tuskegee and many other
-institutions are now putting his teachings into
-practice.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>While in England, Mrs. Stowe was made the object
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_182'>182</span>of much abuse by certain American newspapers,
-which accused her of obtaining British gold for her
-own use. Douglass, through the <cite>North Star</cite>, defended
-her vigorously against these charges, and
-the malicious were silenced. For reasons which he
-could not ascertain, the plans for the industrial
-school were never carried out, and, so far as is
-known, Mrs. Stowe never again took up the project
-with him.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The period that discovered to America and the
-world Harriet Beecher Stowe, the writer of the Abolition
-movement, also revealed John Brown, the
-man of action. What Mrs. Stowe felt and wrote,
-John Brown attempted to carry into effect.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Mr. Douglass’s relations with this man were more
-intimate and continuous than his associations with
-the author of <cite>Uncle Tom’s Cabin</cite>. No one could be
-a part of the anti-slavery movement between 1849
-and 1859 without knowing and being more or less
-influenced by the personality of John Brown. His
-opposition to slavery was like that of no other person.
-It was scarcely a compliment to him to say
-that he was highly regarded by the Abolitionists;
-their feeling toward him had in it more of awe than
-admiration. At all times he would rather fight
-than discuss slavery. He began to dislike it when
-he was twelve years of age. His business, his family,
-his patriotism were all subordinated to the one
-dominant purpose of hurling himself, and everybody
-else who would follow him, against the system.
-He would judge and estimate all persons by
-what they thought and felt about slavery. John
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_183'>183</span>Brown early formed an attachment for Douglass,
-being, in the beginning of his career, better known
-by the Negroes than by the white people. He mingled
-with them continually, hearing over and over
-again the stories, sometimes thrilling, sometimes
-pathetic, of a dawning desire for freedom, and soon
-learned to know almost everything about their condition.
-He became one of the most active conductors
-of the Underground Railway system. Douglass
-says that when the slaves mentioned the name of
-John Brown, they dropped their voices to a whisper,
-as if it were a sort of profanity to speak of him as
-they would of any one else.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In 1847, Douglass received an urgent invitation
-from Brown to visit him at his home in Springfield,
-Mass. He responded to the call as if to a command,
-and he has given the following account of that
-visit:—</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“At the time to which I now refer, this man was
-a respectable merchant in a populous and thriving
-city, and our first place of meeting was at his store.
-A glance at the interior, as well as at the massive
-walls without, gave me the impression that the
-owner must be a man of considerable wealth. My
-welcome was all that I could have asked. Every
-member of the family, young and old, seemed glad
-to see me, and I was made at home in a very little
-while. I was, however, a little disappointed with
-the appearance of the house and its location. After
-seeing the fine store I was prepared to see a fine residence
-in an eligible locality, but this conclusion
-was completely dispelled by actual observation. It
-was a small wooden building on a back street, in a
-neighborhood chiefly occupied by laboring men and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_184'>184</span>mechanics, respectable enough, to be sure, but not
-quite the place, I thought, one would look for the
-residence of a flourishing and successful merchant.
-Plain as was the outside of this man’s house, the inside
-was plainer. There was an air of plainness
-about it which almost suggested destitution. My
-first meal passed under the misnomer of tea, though
-there was nothing about it resembling the usual significance
-of that term. It consisted of beef-soup,
-cabbage and potatoes—a meal such as a man might
-relish after following the plough all day or performing
-a forced march, of a dozen miles, over a rough
-road in frosty weather. Innocent of paint, veneering,
-varnish, or table-cloth, the table announced itself
-unmistakably of pine and of the plainest workmanship.
-There was no hired help visible. The
-mother, daughters and sons did the serving, and did
-it well. They were evidently used to it, and had no
-thought of any impropriety or degradation in being
-their own servants. Everything implied stern truth,
-solid purpose, and rigid economy. I was not long
-in company with the master of this house before I
-discovered that he was indeed the master of it, and
-was likely to become mine too, if I stayed long
-enough with him. He fulfilled St. Paul’s idea of
-the head of the family. His wife believed in him,
-and his children obeyed him with reverence. Whenever
-he spoke, his words commanded earnest attention.
-His arguments, which I ventured at some
-points to oppose, seemed to convince all; his appeals
-touched all, and his will impressed all. Certainly
-I never felt myself in the presence of a
-stronger religious influence than while in this man’s
-house.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“In person he was lean, strong, and sinewy, of
-the best New England mold, built for times of
-trouble, and fitted to grapple with the flintiest
-hardships. Clad in plain American woolen, shod
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_185'>185</span>in boots of cowhide leather, and wearing a cravat of
-the same substantial material, under six feet high,
-less than 150 pounds in weight, aged about fifty
-years, he presented a figure straight and symmetrical
-as a mountain pine. His bearing was singularly
-impressive. His head was not large but compact
-and high. His hair was coarse, his strong
-spare mouth, supported by a broad and prominent
-chin. His eyes were bluish gray, and in conversation
-they were full of light and fire. When on the
-street, he moved with a long springing race-horse
-step, absorbed by his own reflections, neither seeking
-nor shunning observation. Such was the man
-whose name I heard in whispers; such was the
-spirit of his house and family; such was the house
-in which he lived; and such was Captain John
-Brown, whose name has now passed into history, as
-that of one of the most marked characters and
-greatest heroes known to American fame.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“After the strong meal described, Brown cautiously
-approached the subject which he wished to
-bring to my attention; for he seemed to apprehend
-opposition to his views. He denounced slavery in
-look and language fierce and bitter; he thought
-that slave-holders had forfeited their right to live,
-that the slaves had a right to gain their liberty in
-any way they could; did not believe that moral
-suasion would ever liberate a slave, or that political
-action would abolish the system. He said that he
-had long had a plan which could accomplish this
-end, and he had invited me to his house to lay that
-plan before me. He said that he had been for some
-time looking for colored men to whom he could
-safely reveal his secret, and at times he had almost
-despaired of finding such men; but that now he was
-encouraged, because he saw heads of such rising in
-all directions. He had observed my course at home
-and abroad, and he wanted my coöperation. His
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_186'>186</span>plan, as it then lay in his mind, had much to commend
-it. It did not, as some suppose, contemplate
-a general rising among the slaves, and a general
-slaughter of the slave-masters. An insurrection, he
-thought, would only defeat the object; but his plan
-did contemplate the creating of an armed force
-which should act in the very heart of the South.
-He was not averse to the shedding of blood, and
-thought the carrying of firearms would be a good
-rule for the colored people to adopt, as it would give
-them a sense of their manhood. No people, he
-said, could have self-respect, or be respected, who
-would not fight for their freedom. He called my
-attention to the map of the United States. ‘These
-mountains,’ he said, ‘are the basis of my plan. God
-has given the strength of the hills to freedom; they
-were placed here for the emancipation of the Negro
-race; they are full of natural forts, where one man
-for defense will be equal to a hundred for attack;
-they are full also of good hiding places, where large
-numbers of brave men could be concealed, and baffle
-and elude pursuit for a long time. I know these
-mountains well, and could take a body of men into
-them and keep them there, in spite of all the efforts
-of Virginia to dislodge them. The true object to be
-sought is first of all to destroy the money value of
-slave-property; and that can only be done by rendering
-such property insecure. My plan, then, is
-to take, at first, about twenty-five picked men, and
-begin on a small scale; supply them with arms and
-ammunition and post them in squads of fives on a
-line of twenty-five miles. The most persuasive and
-judicious of these shall go down to the fields from
-time to time, as opportunity offers, and induce the
-slaves to join them, seeking and selecting the most
-reckless and daring.’”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>From this time on the relationship between these
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_187'>187</span>two Abolitionists grew in intimacy and thereafter
-Mr. Douglass’s Rochester home was John Brown’s
-headquarters whenever he was in that part of the
-country.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In the Springfield conference, he related his daring
-plans for the rescue of the slaves in Virginia.
-Mr. Douglass readily saw how impracticable and
-certain of disastrous failure this project must be,
-but John Brown could never be made to understand
-the peril of anything that he thought it was right
-to do. The possibility of failure seemed never to
-enter into his calculations. Mr. Douglass said to
-him at Springfield:</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“Suppose you succeed in running off a few
-slaves, and thus impress the Virginia slave-holders
-with a sense of insecurity in their slaves, the effect
-will be only to make them sell their slaves further
-South.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Whereupon Captain Brown replied: “That will
-be just what I want first to do; then I would follow
-them up. If we could drive them out of one county
-it would be a great gain; it would weaken the
-system throughout the state.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“But,” said Douglass, “they would employ
-blood-hounds to hunt you out of the mountains.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“That they might attempt,” was the answer,
-“but the chances are that we should whip them, and
-when we should have whipped one squad, they
-would be careful how they pursued us.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Thus would Brown confidently meet all possible
-obstacles to his plan of invasion. If any other man
-had urged such views about freeing the slaves with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_188'>188</span>a force of less than one hundred men in the Virginia
-mountains, he would have been regarded as
-ridiculous; but John Brown was an advocate of
-such intensity of faith and readiness to put himself
-in front of every danger, that it required no little
-courage to oppose him.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Mr. Douglass was evidently much affected by
-this interview. He had never before seen courage
-and self-confidence so imperious, or a determination
-to do something large and terrible so absolutely regardless
-of consequences. After this conference
-he admits that his own “utterances became more
-and more tinged by the color of this man’s strong
-impressions,” and his conviction grew “that slavery
-could only end in blood.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Brown’s influence was easily traceable in Mr.
-Douglass’s subsequent utterances, both in the <cite>North
-Star</cite> and in his public addresses. During the fight
-for free soil and free men in Kansas, after the Kansas-Nebraska
-bill became a law, Mr. Douglass
-probably did more than any one to supply the
-militant captain with money and munitions. The
-full size of Brown as a man was revealed in Kansas
-when the struggle between pro-slavery and anti-slavery
-forces became actual war. His daring deeds
-in going into the state of Missouri, bringing out
-dozens of slaves and conducting them safely to the
-North; and his fight to keep Kansas free, could not
-have succeeded, but for the support of such men as
-Frederick Douglass. Captain Brown’s experiences
-and adventures here strengthened his conviction
-that his plans for the invasion of Virginia were
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_189'>189</span>right. He had studied the mountain ranges and
-was satisfied in his own mind that the “Almighty
-had raised those mountains for the very purpose of
-aiding him to strike a death blow to slavery.” The
-correspondence between the two men continued and
-the black leader was well informed of every movement.
-Brown never ceased to urge the ex-slave to
-join him, both in drawing up a constitution for
-future use and in the actual fighting. Indeed he
-had so exalted an opinion of Douglass’s influence
-that it was believed the slaves in Virginia and other
-parts of the South would rise <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">en masse</span></i> if they knew
-that he was a part of this rescuing army.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>About three weeks before the assault at Harper’s
-Ferry, while John Brown was at Chambersburg,
-making final arrangements for his attack, he sent
-an urgent letter to Douglass, begging a conference.
-The latter knew that this was a perilous step and
-would certainly implicate him in the conspiracy
-when the crash of failure came; yet he ignored the
-danger and responded. He speaks of this last
-visit to the old warrior, in part, as follows:</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“I approached the old quarry with a good deal
-of caution, for John Brown was generally armed
-and regarded strangers with suspicion. He was
-there under ban of the government and heavy rewards
-were offered for his arrest for several offenses
-which he is said to have committed in Kansas. He
-was then passing under the name of John Smith.
-As I came near him, he regarded me rather suspiciously,
-but soon recognized me and received me
-cordially. He had in his hand, when I met him,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_190'>190</span>fishing tackle, with which he had been fishing in a
-stream hard by, but I saw no fish.... The
-fishing was simply a disguise and was certainly a
-good one. He looked in every way like a man of
-the neighborhood and as much at home as any of
-the farmers around there. His hat was old and
-storm-beaten and his clothing was about the color
-of the quarry itself, his present dwelling-place.
-His face wore an anxious expression and he was
-much worn by exposure. I felt that I was on a
-dangerous mission and was as little desirous of discovery
-as himself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Captains Brown, Kage, Shields Green and Mr.
-Douglass sat down to hold a council of war. The
-whole scheme of the proposed attack on Harper’s
-Ferry and its capture was gone over without the
-slightest hint of possible failure. Douglass opposed
-the plan as wholly impracticable and fatal to
-all who might engage in it, but his arguments were
-promptly set aside by Brown. “He was not to be
-shaken by anything I could say, but treated my
-views respectfully. The debate continued during
-Saturday and Sunday. Brown was for striking a
-blow that would arouse the country, and I, for the
-policy of gradually and secretly drawing off the
-slaves to the mountains, as at first suggested by
-Brown himself.” In the most fervent manner he
-urged Mr. Douglass to remain and take part in the
-fight. Just before the latter’s departure, Brown
-threw his arm around the black man’s neck and
-said: “Come with me, Douglass! I will defend
-you with my life. I want you for a special purpose.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_191'>191</span>When I strike, the bees will begin to swarm,
-and I shall want you to help hive them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The colored leader did not yield to the entreaty.
-Brown was incapable of seeing the death-trap that
-he had set for himself and his followers, and even
-if he could have seen it, he would not have been
-moved from his determination. A thousand men
-might have followed him and all have perished, but
-there could have been but one martyr, and that was
-himself. Mr. Douglass’s death would have been a
-wanton sacrifice, because it would have meant nothing
-to the cause for which he had contributed so
-much of his life during the previous twenty-five
-years. He had a right to feel, as his subsequent
-career so abundantly proved, that his work was not
-finished. Of all the Abolitionists he was the only
-one who followed Brown to the last with advice,
-money, and other assistance. Because of what he
-had already done, and especially in this final conference
-at Chambersburg, he became amenable, as
-afterward appeared, to the charge of treason.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>When the news was flashed over the land that
-John Brown was captured, the whole country was
-thrown into a state of great excitement. In Virginia
-the conclusion was quickly reached that the
-raid was backed by a wide-spread conspiracy
-and that men high in rank were implicated.
-Mr. Douglass at the time was addressing a large audience
-in Philadelphia. If he had any fear for himself,
-he did not show it. By lingering in the state
-so near the borders of slavery, where he had just
-been in conference with the head and front of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_192'>192</span>movement, he was in imminent danger. Brown’s
-satchel, now in the hands of the officials, contained
-much of Douglass’s correspondence. His friends
-were apprehensive and insisted upon his immediate
-flight from Philadelphia to his home in Rochester,
-and thence to Canada. As a matter of precaution,
-the following telegram was sent by his friend, Miss
-Assing, to Rochester:</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“B. F. Blackall, Esq.: Tell Lewis [Douglass’s
-eldest son] to secure all the important papers in my
-desk.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>All the newspapers stated that the Federal Government
-would spare no pains to run down and
-arrest every one who was in any way connected with
-the conspiracy. It would have been gratifying to
-those in power to have laid hands on Frederick
-Douglass and to have made an example of him,
-because he was regarded as one of the most offensive
-of those who fought slavery. That his friends were
-not unduly anxious for his safety is also proven by
-the following copy of a letter signed by the Governor
-of Virginia and sent to the President:</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“(Confidential.)</p>
-<div class='c020'>“<span class='sc'>Richmond, Va., Nov. 13, 1859.</span></div>
-<p class='c021'>“<em>To His Excellency, James Buchanan, President of
-the United States, and to the Honorable Postmaster-General
-of the United States</em>:</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“<span class='sc'>Gentlemen</span>:—I have information such as
-has caused me, upon proper affidavits, to make
-requisition upon the Executive of Michigan for the
-delivery up of the person of Frederick Douglass, a
-Negro man, supposed now to be in Michigan,
-charged with murder, robbery, and inciting servile
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_193'>193</span>insurrection in the State of Virginia. My agents
-for the arrest and reclamation of the person so
-charged, are Benjamin M. Morris and William N.
-Kelly. The latter has the requisition and will wait
-on you to the end of obtaining nominal authority
-as post-office agents. They need to be very secretive
-in this matter, and some pretext for traveling
-through this dangerous section for the execution of
-the laws in this behalf, and some protection against
-obtrusive, unruly, or lawless violence. If it be
-proper to do so, will the Postmaster-General be
-pleased to give to Mr. Kelly, for each of these men,
-a permit and authority to act as detectives for the
-Post-office Department, without pay, but to pass
-and repass without question, delay, or hindrance?</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c018'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Respectfully submitted,</div>
- <div class='line in12'>“By your obedient servant,</div>
- <div class='line in20'>“<span class='sc'>Henry A. Wise</span>.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c004'>Mr. Douglass was fairly pushed into Canada by
-his friends, but the determination to get hold of
-him was so strong that he was not regarded as safe
-even there. It would not have been impossible to
-effect some plan for arresting him so long as he remained
-so close to his native land. It was decided
-therefore that he must again go to England. He
-had already planned this trip, but the interesting
-events that culminated in the Harper’s Ferry
-tragedy had delayed his departure.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Mr. Douglass stated publicly that he would be
-perfectly willing to be tried anywhere in New York
-State, but not elsewhere. He took passage for England
-from Quebec on the 12th day of November,
-1859, and was everywhere received with the old-time
-cordiality. As he was fresh from the scenes
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_194'>194</span>and events that had stirred the English almost as
-much as the American people, he was in great
-demand for more complete information. He had
-occasion to deliver many addresses and it was everywhere
-manifest that he had lost none of his former
-prestige. The only setback he suffered was when
-he applied to George M. Dallas, the American Minister
-to the Court of St. James, for a passport for the
-purpose of visiting Paris. He was refused on the
-ground that he was not a citizen of the United
-States. His visit was cut short by the distressing
-news of the death of his beloved little daughter,
-Anna, the delight and life of his home, his absence
-having covered only five months. He returned to
-find the public temper toward him mollified by the
-swift happenings of a season which was marked by
-incessant change in the currents of popular feeling.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_195'>195</span>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER XI<br> <span class='large'>FOREBODINGS OF THE CRISIS</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c003'>The ten years from 1850 to 1860 were years of
-cumulative danger to the republic and to the principles
-of liberty and democracy upon which it was
-founded. For the Negro these years contained
-more of perils than of hopes. The great historical
-events growing out of the conflict between the pro-slavery
-and the anti-slavery parties appeared to
-have set the goal of emancipation ever farther out
-of the range of practical possibilities. The Fugitive
-Slave Law seemed for a time to put an end to all
-hopes for further rescues from bondage. The Dred
-Scott Decision made every Negro, free or slave, an
-outlaw. The Kansas-Nebraska Bill threatened to
-render slavery so thoroughly national that Abolition
-would be forever impossible. Finally, the
-John Brown raid intensified, for a time, the hatred
-toward the colored people and their friends in the
-North.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>But the success of the pro-slavery party was more
-apparent than real. It had gained merely a tactical
-victory. All the deeper currents of the nation’s life
-were running counter to it. The raid excited the
-horror of the people. Even men active as Abolitionists
-denounced the acts of John Brown as both
-foolhardy and wicked. It seemed for a time that
-every one prominent in social and political life in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_196'>196</span>the North was anxious publicly to disavow all
-share in what was described as a “reckless and
-fanatical” deed. But John Brown’s raid did not
-bring the people of the North and South any nearer
-together. On the contrary, it merely widened the
-breach between them. The North might disclaim
-this act, but the people of the opposite section were
-not satisfied with these disclaimers. It seemed to
-them that behind John Brown was a great conspiracy,
-and that the North, having determined to
-make a nullity of the Fugitive Slave Law, was preparing
-to follow it up with still more daring efforts
-to free the slaves at any cost.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Brown was hurried to the gallows, but not before
-an effort was made to implicate in his crime men
-who were prominent as Abolitionists. It has already
-been shown what steps were taken to capture
-Frederick Douglass. A Congressional committee
-was appointed for the purpose of thoroughly investigating
-the whole matter, but it accomplished nothing.
-It is scarcely necessary to say that the death
-of Brown produced an impression throughout the
-country quite as profound as that already created
-by his “raid.” The execution changed public
-sentiment at once. People now began to feel and
-to say that the cause, and not the man, had been on
-trial when he was found guilty. The sentence of
-death passed by the Virginia court transformed
-Brown in the eyes of a great many Northern people
-into a martyr and shed a halo over the cause for
-which he gave his life. Emerson compared the
-gallows of Virginia to the cross in Palestine. All
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_197'>197</span>through the North the people began to sing the
-song that continued to be a favorite throughout the
-Civil War:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c022'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“John Brown’s body lies a-mouldering in the grave,</div>
- <div class='line in8'>But his soul is marching on.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c004'>The panic-stricken friends of freedom recovered
-their spirits and renewed their attacks with increased
-vigor. To quote from Frederick Douglass:
-“John Brown’s defeat was already assuming the
-form of victory, and his death was giving new life
-and power to the principles of justice and liberty.
-What he had lost by the sword, he had more than
-gained by the truth.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The people of the South all through this controversy
-had shown themselves correct interpreters of
-public sentiment. They clearly saw that the execution
-of John Brown did not put an end to the cause
-of Abolition. This reckless act of invasion was
-merely typical of what was possible on a scale of
-vaster proportions. In spite of everything that had
-been achieved by law and by decisions of the
-Supreme Court, the trend of feeling in the North
-was steadily against slavery. In spite of the Fugitive
-Slave Law and an increasing vigilance on the
-part of masters and their agents, the Underground
-Railroad continued its business of carrying slave-property
-to free soil. Charles Sumner’s speech in
-the Senate added fresh interest to the cause of emancipation,
-and the continued popularity of <cite>Uncle
-Tom’s Cabin</cite> was ominous. All these disquieting circumstances
-boded some dreadful issue of the controversy.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_198'>198</span>The drift of events is best exhibited in the
-effects of the Kansas-Nebraska Bill, already referred
-to. When this bill became a law, as the consummation
-of the policy of Senator Stephen A. Douglas
-of Illinois, the physical boundary between slavery
-and freedom, which many had supposed to be fixed
-as firmly as the Declaration of Independence, was
-swept away and all the vast empire of the west and
-northwest became disputed ground between the
-forces of free soil and slavery. This act gave effect
-to the new doctrines of state sovereignty. Whatever
-may have been its purpose, the result was to
-unite the forces of the North and South, pitting the
-two sections against each other in a struggle for
-supremacy in the new territory. In outward appearance
-this new doctrine was peaceful and sound,
-but it held dreadful possibilities. Expressed plainly,
-the Kansas-Nebraska Law said that whether these
-new states should be free or slave-states must be
-left to the people. It was for them to vote slavery
-“up” or “down.” In other words, if the majority
-of the people of these territories voted for slavery,
-it became, by their sovereign will, an institution
-fixed and irrevocable; if not, slavery was forever
-to be shut out, just as it was excluded from Massachusetts.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The intensity of public interest in and anxiety
-for the future status of these new states was shown
-in the instant rush into Kansas from New England
-of colonists favorable to the cause of free soil, and
-from the South of colonists favorable to the cause of
-slavery. Each side appreciated how momentous
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_199'>199</span>was the issue. The people of Missouri and other
-neighboring slave-states knew that it would be difficult,
-with a free state adjoining them to hold their
-bond-servants in security. The people of New England
-and other Northern states understood that the
-political supremacy of the free-states would be forever
-lost if the South were able to make slave-ground
-out of the western territory.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>It was an exciting contest and soon proved a gory
-one. Men from both sections were expecting that
-the struggle would be attended with bloodshed and
-they went out armed and prepared for it. Kansas,
-“bleeding Kansas,” was a battle-ground. It is
-not necessary here to recount the sanguinary incidents
-between the cohorts of emancipation and
-slavery in this neutral territory. Suffice it to say
-that in the end the cause of free soil triumphed and
-the contest was merely preliminary to a vaster conflict
-of which it was a premonitory token.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Before and during these stormy events in Kansas,
-there was in progress an intellectual conflict which
-was destined to have a more serious ending. This
-was the historic debates between Abraham Lincoln
-and Stephen A. Douglas, both of Illinois. More
-clearly, perhaps than any other one event, this
-round of speeches formulated the issue which
-divided the American people politically on the
-question of slavery. It revealed to the nation a
-man who gave to them, for the first time, a frank
-and clear-cut definition of the issue to which
-it had been brought by the struggle. Lincoln
-said in effect: “The Union cannot long endure,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_200'>200</span>half-slave and half-free. It must be all one or all
-the other, and the public mind can find no resting-place
-but in the ultimate extinction of slavery.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Of course, this was but a reiteration of what had
-been repeatedly said by the Abolitionists during the
-past twenty-five years, but coming now at a time
-when there was an unconscious groping of the popular
-mind toward a definite issue for public action,
-these clear words seemed to be charged with meaning
-of tremendous importance. The people of the
-whole country listened to these Illinois debaters
-with an interest that seemed prescient of coming
-events. As the debate progressed, Mr. Lincoln
-seemed to rise visibly and steadily from the western
-provincial obscurity he had lived in up to this
-point, to a prominence in which he appeared for the
-time to overshadow every one else who had spoken
-on the great question. The immediate prize to be
-won in the debate was a seat in the United States
-Senate; but before its close, this sank into insignificance,
-and the presidency of the United States, the
-preservation of the Union, and the fate of slavery,
-had become the stakes of the contest.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The issues in the coming election already began
-to shape themselves along the lines enunciated by
-Mr. Lincoln and Senator Douglas. In due time new
-political alignments were completed as follows:</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>(1) The pro-slavery and Union Democrats of the
-North stood for state sovereignty, or the right of
-the people of a territory to admit or bar slavery as
-they saw fit. Senator Douglas was the unquestioned
-leader of this wing of the Democratic party.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_201'>201</span>(2) The pro-slavery people of the South stood
-for the bold declaration that the Constitution of its
-own force gave the right to carry slaves into any
-territory of the United States and to hold them
-there, with or without the consent of the people of
-the territory. John C. Breckinridge was the leader
-of the Southern wing of the Democracy.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>(3) Abraham Lincoln was chosen to bear the
-standard of all the people who were opposed to
-both varieties of pro-slavery Democrats. His doctrine
-was that the Federal Government had the
-right to exclude slavery from the territories of the
-United States, and that this right and power ought
-to be exercised to keep slavery within the confines
-of the then existing slave-states.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>It will be seen that emancipation was not an issue
-on the surface of these declarations of principles.
-The whole question appeared to be: Shall slavery
-have the power of expansion? If this power were
-denied, could there be any doubt as to what must
-ultimately follow? If the people feared the power
-of slavery to such an extent that they would or
-could keep it within a restricted territory, would
-not this principle, when successful, be the first step
-toward its extirpation? The South more clearly
-than the North understood that the triumph of Mr.
-Lincoln would settle nothing. Beneath these platform
-utterances was the unwritten issue: Slavery’s
-security of expansion, or its “ultimate extinction.”
-If the South won in the impending contest, not only
-would slavery be secured by the right of its extension
-into the undivided territory west of the Mississippi,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_202'>202</span>but political supremacy might pass permanently
-from the free-states.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The position of Stephen A. Douglas and his followers
-was rather anomalous. As the Senator at
-one time expressed it, he cared not whether the
-question of extending slavery into the territories
-was “voted up or voted down”; with him the important
-thing seemed to be that the people of the
-new territory should have the opportunity to vote
-on the question and decide for themselves the character
-of their institutions.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Mr. Lincoln’s followers represented nearly everything
-left of the spirit that was glorified in the
-Declaration of Independence and the Revolution of
-1776. Those who would preserve the soil of the
-West free; those who would not only restrict, but
-abolish slavery altogether; and those who would
-endow the Negro with all the proclaimed natural
-rights of man, supported Lincoln.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The situation was complicated as well as perilous.
-Heretofore, when the only question between the
-North and the South was slavery or the right to
-hold slaves, the people of the North were governed
-as much by their racial prejudices as the Southern
-people. Now, however, when other questions, incidental
-to slavery, as, for instance, the future political
-supremacy, were involved with the main issue,
-many men and women, who had heretofore been indifferent
-or silent, became actively concerned, and
-felt impelled to take a definite stand. There seems
-never to have been any possibility of the North and
-South going to war on account of Negro slavery. It
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_203'>203</span>was at this time clear from the whole history of the
-controversy that if the Negro were ever to be free,
-his freedom must come as a consequence and not as
-the cause of a conflict.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Probably no man in public life saw this more
-clearly than Frederick Douglass. He was just as
-much a part of the history in the process of making,
-all about him, as he was permitted to be. He had
-his say and was heard. He understood the trend of
-events and he was not swept away by merely transitory
-incidents. In all this controversy he sought
-constantly, in his speeches, and in his paper, <cite>Douglass’s
-Monthly</cite>, to lift into clear view the paramount
-issue. The following extract from one of his
-speeches indicates the clearness with which he saw,
-and the definiteness with which he was able to foreshadow
-the events of the next succeeding years:</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“The only choice left to this nation is abolition
-or destruction. You must abolish slavery or abandon
-the Union. It is plain that there can never be
-any union between the North and South, while the
-South values slavery more than nationality. A
-union of interests is essential to a union of ideas
-and without this union of ideas, the outer form of
-union will be but as a rope of sand.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>During the Illinois debates, Frederick Douglass
-did all he could to enforce the arguments and extend
-the steadily growing influence of Mr. Lincoln.
-He made an extensive campaign in Michigan, Wisconsin,
-and Iowa. His audiences were large and
-interested, being eager to hear any man who could
-speak with the distinction, clearness, and frankness
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_204'>204</span>that characterized his public utterances. He had
-grown in esteem and the mob-spirit that tried to
-harass him in his earlier campaigns in the West
-had given way before his increasing influence and
-popularity. Once in Illinois he met Senator Douglas,
-who treated him with marked courtesy.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In 1854, Frederick Douglass delivered an address
-in Chicago which ranks as one of his greatest orations.
-Frederick May Holland, who has already
-been referred to as the author of a valuable biography
-of the Negro leader, has given to the public,
-for the first time, I believe, nearly all of this interesting
-speech. The reproduction of at least a part
-of it seems essential to this chapter:</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“The Constitution knows no man by the color of
-his skin. The men who made it were too noble for
-any such limitation of humanity and human rights.
-The term ‘white’ is a modern term in the legislation
-of this country. It was never used in the better
-days of our republic, but has sprung up within the
-period of our national degeneracy.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“I am here simply as an American citizen, having
-a stake in the weal or woe of the nation in common
-with other citizens. I am not here as the
-agent of any sect or party. Parties are too politic
-and sects are too sectarian, to select one of my
-odious class and of my radical opinions, at this important
-time and place, to represent them. Nevertheless,
-I do not stand alone here. There are noble-minded
-men in Illinois who are neither ashamed of
-their cause nor their company. Some of them are
-here to-night, and I expect to meet them in every
-part of the state where I may travel.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“But, I pray, hold no man or party responsible
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_205'>205</span>for my words, for I am no man’s agent, and I am no
-party’s agent.... It is alleged that I came
-here in this state to insult Senator Douglas. Among
-gentlemen that is only an insult that is intended to
-be such, and I disavow all such intention. I am
-here precisely as I was in this state one year ago—with
-no other change in my relations to you, or the
-great question of human freedom, than time and
-circumstances have brought about. I shall deal
-with the same subject with the same spirit now as
-then, approving such men and such measures as
-look to the security of liberty in the land and with
-my whole heart condemning such men and measures
-as serve to subvert or endanger it. If Hon. S. A.
-Douglas, your beloved and highly gifted senator,
-has designedly or through mistaken notions of public
-policy, ranged himself on the side of oppressors,
-and the deadliest enemies of liberty, I know of no
-reason, either in this world or in any other world,
-which should prevent me or any one else, from
-thinking so or saying so.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“The people in whose cause I came here to-night
-are not among those whose right to regulate their
-own domestic concerns is so feelingly, and earnestly,
-and eloquently contended for in certain quarters.
-They have no Stephen A. Douglas, no General Cass,
-to contend at North Market Hall for their popular
-sovereignty. They have no national purse, no
-offices, no reputation with which to corrupt Congress,
-or to tempt men, mighty in eloquence and
-influence into their service. Oh, no! They have
-nothing to commend them, but their unadorned
-humanity. They are human—that’s all—only
-human. Nature owns them as human; but men
-own them as property, and only as property. Every
-right of human nature, as such, is denied them;
-they are dumb in their chains. To utter one groan
-or scream for freedom in the presence of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_206'>206</span>Southern advocate of popular sovereignty, is to
-bring down the frightful lash upon their quivering
-flesh. I know this suffering people; I am acquainted
-with their sorrows; I am one with them
-in experience; I have felt the lash of the slave-driver, and stand up here with all the bitter recollections
-of its horrors vividly upon me.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“There are special reasons why I should speak
-and speak freely. The right of speech is a very
-precious one. I understand that Mr. Douglas regards
-himself as the most abused man in the United
-States; and that the greatest outrage ever committed
-upon him was in the case in which your indignation
-raised your voices so high that he could
-not be heard. No personal violence, as I understand,
-was offered him. It seems to have been a
-trial of vocal powers between the individual and
-the multitude; and as might have been expected,
-the voice of one man was not equal in volume to
-the voices of five thousand. I do not mention this
-circumstance to approve it; I do not approve it. I
-am for free speech, as well as free men and free soil;
-but how ineffably insignificant is this wrong done in
-a single instance, compared to the stupendous iniquity
-perpetrated against more than three millions
-of the American people, who are struck dumb by
-the very men in whose cause Mr. Senator Douglas
-was here to plead! While I would not approve the
-silencing of Mr. Douglas, may we not hope that
-this slight abridgment of his rights, may lead him
-to respect in some degree the rights of other men,
-as good in the eye of Heaven as himself?</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“Let us now consider the great question of the
-age, the only great national question which seriously
-agitates the public mind at this hour. It is
-called the vexed question, and excites alarm in
-every quarter of the country.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“The proposition to repeal the Missouri Compromise,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_207'>207</span>was a stunning one. It fell upon the
-nation like a bolt from a cloudless sky. The thing
-was too startling for belief. You believed in the
-South and you believed in the North; and you
-knew that the repeal of the Missouri Compromise
-was a breach of honor; and therefore, you said that
-the thing could not be done. Besides both parties
-had pledged themselves directly, positively, and
-solemnly against reopening in Congress the agitation
-on the subject of slavery; and the President
-himself had declared his intention to maintain the
-national quiet. Upon these assurances you rested
-and rested fatally. But you should have learned
-long ago that men do not gather grapes of thorns or
-figs of thistles. It is folly to put faith in men
-who have broken faith with God. When a man
-has brought himself to enslave a child of God, to
-put fetters on his brother, he has qualified himself
-to disregard the most sacred of compacts; beneath
-the sky there is nothing more sacred than man, and
-nothing can be properly respected when manhood
-is despised and trampled upon.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“It is said that slavery is the creature of positive
-law, and that it can only exist where it is sustained
-by positive law—that neither in Kansas nor Nebraska
-is there any law establishing slavery, and
-that therefore, the moment a slave-holder carries his
-slaves into these territories, he is free and restored
-to the rights of human nature. This is the ground
-taken by General Cass. He contended for it in the
-North Market Hall, with much eloquence and skill.
-I thought, while I was hearing him on this point,
-that slave-holders would not be likely to thank him
-for the argument. It is not true that slavery cannot
-exist without being established by positive law.
-The instance cannot be shown where a law was ever
-made establishing slavery, where the relation of
-master and slave did not previously exist. The law
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_208'>208</span>is always an after-coming consideration. Wicked
-men first overpower and subdue their fellow-men to
-slavery, and then call in the law to sanction the
-deed. Even in the slave-states of America, slavery
-has never been established by law. It was not established
-under the colonial charters of the original
-states, nor the Constitution of the United States. It
-is now and has always been a system of lawless violence.
-On this proposition I hold myself ready and
-willing to meet any defender of the Nebraska bill.
-I would not hesitate to meet even the author of that
-bill himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“He says he wants no broad, black line across
-this continent. Such a line is odious, and begets
-unkind feelings between the citizens of a common
-country. Now, fellow citizens, why is the line of
-thirty-six degrees, thirty minutes, a broad black
-line? What is it that entitles it to be called a black
-line? It is the fashion to call whatever is odious in
-this country, black. You call the devil black, and
-he may be; but what is there in the line of thirty-six
-degrees, thirty minutes, which makes it blacker
-than the line which separates Illinois from Missouri
-or Michigan from Indiana? I can see nothing in
-the line itself which should make it black or odious.
-It is a line, that’s all. It is black, black and
-odious, not because it is a line, but because of the
-things it separates. If it keep asunder what God
-has joined together, or separate what God intended
-should be fused, then it may be called an odious
-line, a black line; but if, on the other hand, it
-marks only a distinction natural and eternal, a distinction
-fixed in the nature of things by the eternal
-God, then I say, withered be the arm and blasted be
-the hand that would blot it out.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“Nothing could be further from the truth, then,
-to say that popular sovereignty is accorded to the
-people who may settle the territories of Kansas and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_209'>209</span>Nebraska. The three great cardinal powers of government
-are the executive, legislative and judicial.
-Are these powers sacred to the people of Kansas and
-Nebraska? You know they are not. That bill
-places the people of that territory, as completely
-under the powers of the Federal government as
-Canada is under British rule. By this Kansas-Nebraska
-Bill, the Federal government has the substance
-of all governing power, while the people
-have the shadow. The judicial power of the territories
-is not from the people of the territories, who
-are so bathed in the sunlight of popular sovereignty
-by stump eloquence, but from the Federal government.
-The executive power of the territories
-derives its existence, not from the overflowing
-fountain of popular sovereignty, but from the Federal
-government. The secretaries of the territories
-are not appointed by the sovereign people of the
-territories, but are appointed independent of popular
-sovereignty.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“But is there nothing in this bill that justifies the
-supposition that it contains the principle of popular
-sovereignty? No, not one word. Even the territorial
-councils, elected, not by the people of the
-territory, but only by certain descriptions of people,
-are subject to a double veto power, vested, first in
-the governor, whom they did not elect, and second
-in the President of the United States. The only
-shadow of popular sovereignty is the power given
-to the people of the territories by this bill to have,
-hold, buy, and sell human beings. The sovereign
-right to make slaves of their fellow-men, if they
-choose, is the only sovereignty that the bill secures.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“But it may be said that Congress has the right
-to allow the people of the territories to hold slaves.
-The answer is, that Congress is made up of men, and
-possesses only the rights of men; and unless it can
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_210'>210</span>be shown that some men have a right to hold their
-fellow-men as property, Congress has no such right.
-There is not a man within the sound of my voice,
-who has not as good a right to enslave a brother
-man, as Congress has. This will not be denied,
-even by slave-holders.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“Error may be new, or it may be old, since it is
-founded in a misapprehension of what truth is. It
-has its beginnings; and its endings. But not so
-truth. Truth is eternal. Like the great God, from
-whose throne it emanates, it is from everlasting to
-everlasting, and can never pass away. Such a truth
-is man’s right to freedom. He was born with it.
-It was his before he comprehended it. The title
-deed to it was written by the Almighty on His
-heart; and the record of it is in the bosom of the
-Eternal; and never can Stephen A. Douglas efface
-it, unless he can tear from the great heart of God
-this truth; and this mighty government of ours will
-never be at peace with God, unless it shall practically
-and universally embrace this great truth as
-the fountain of all its institutions, and the rule of
-its entire administration....</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“Now, gentlemen—I have done. I have no fear
-for the ultimate triumph of free principles in this
-country. The signs of the times are propitious.
-Victories have been won by slavery; but they have
-never been won against the onward march of anti-slavery
-principles. The progress of these principles
-has been constant, steady, strong and certain.
-Every victory won by slavery has had the effect to
-fling our principles more widely and favorably
-among the people. The annexation of Texas, the
-Florida war, the war with Mexico, the Compromise
-Measures, and the repeal of the Missouri Compromise,
-have all signally vindicated the wisdom of the
-great God, who has promised to override the wickedness
-of men for His own glory—to confound the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_211'>211</span>wisdom of the crafty and bring to naught the
-counsels of the ungodly.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The nomination, in 1860, of Mr. Lincoln by the
-Republican party, of Stephen A. Douglas by the
-Northern Democracy, and of John C. Breckinridge
-by the Southern Democracy, brought on that memorable
-campaign which preceded the final collision
-between the North and the South.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“Into the fight,” says Frederick Douglass, “I
-threw myself, with a firm faith and more ardent
-hope than ever before, and what I could do by pen
-and voice was done with a will. The most memorable
-feature of the canvass, was that it was prosecuted
-under the shadow of a threat.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The followers of Breckinridge had boldly announced
-that if they were defeated, they would not
-submit to the rule of Abraham Lincoln, but would
-proceed to take the slave-states out of the Union.
-This threat of secession was not a new one, but,
-coming, as it did, after the failure to make Kansas
-a slave-state, it created something like a panic in
-the North. It served for the moment to divert public
-opinion from political issues to the very grave
-possibility of national disruption.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In spite of this openly declared purpose on the
-part of the Southern Democracy, the Republican
-party, made up in part of Whigs, the old “Liberty”
-and “Free Soil” parties, and a large number of the
-Abolitionists, elected Abraham Lincoln as President
-of the United States.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>It was a signal victory, but it brought with it
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_212'>212</span>little comfort, more anxiety, and many grave responsibilities.
-The people of the North were desirous
-of peace, and so were the people of the South;
-but to agree on terms was difficult. While the
-North, in the presence of a great triumph was
-worried and anxious, the South openly and resolutely
-began to prepare for secession and war.
-When, in the early part of the presidential canvass,
-the South notified the nation what it would do in
-case of defeat, the threat was generally accepted as
-mere bluster. No sooner was the result of the election
-known than there began to accumulate evidence
-which indicated that this threat was backed by a
-very positive determination to carry it out. The
-states south of the Ohio prepared to leave the
-Union in orderly procession, as if secession were a
-familiar and undisputed custom. The administration,
-under President Buchanan, saw the process of
-national dismemberment go on and merely declared
-that it could find no power in the Constitution to
-coerce a state. In the presence of this unchallenged
-dissolution of the Union, the North fairly quaked
-with fear. An opinion which favored almost any
-kind of compromise that would save the country
-from the horrors of civil war gained wide influence.
-While the South was confident of its strength to
-maintain itself in its present course, it did finally
-and with apparent reluctance, indicate a few of the
-conditions on which it would agree to remain in the
-Union. Among these were the following:</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Each Northern state, through its legislature or in
-convention assembled, should repeal all laws which
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_213'>213</span>tended to impair the constitutional rights of the
-South.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>It should pass laws for the easy and prompt execution
-of the Fugitive Slave Law.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Laws should be passed imposing penalties on all
-malefactors, who should hereafter encourage the
-escape of fugitive slaves.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Laws should be passed declaring and protecting
-the rights of slave-holders to travel and sojourn in
-Northern states, accompanied by their slaves.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Every state should instruct its representatives and
-senators in Congress to repeal the law prohibiting
-the sale of slaves in the District of Columbia, and
-pass laws sufficient for the full protection of slave
-property in the territories of the Union.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>These conditions, offered by the South, could not
-be heartily approved by the people who had just
-won such a decided victory on an issue involving
-these very conditions. Yet there was a decided
-wave of popular feeling in favor of peace upon any
-terms. Men of positive convictions and eminent in
-all walks of life—William H. Seward, H. B. Anthony,
-and Joshua R. Giddings—were now ready to
-purchase it at almost any price. The enthusiasm
-for emancipation and free soil that had so stirred
-the North during the presidential campaign, began
-to wane, and so serious a reaction set in that, for a
-time, it seemed likely to make barren the Republican
-victory. Not only so, but the mob-spirit of
-the ’30’s was reawakened, and Wendell Phillips,
-William Lloyd Garrison, Frederick Douglass, and
-their supporters were assaulted on the streets of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_214'>214</span>Boston. The people of the North refused to tolerate
-further agitation against slavery, and were desirous,
-in every possible way, to appease the anger of the
-other section. Committees were appointed to confer
-with representatives of the South for the purpose
-of obtaining a better understanding of their
-grievances.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Thus, while the North seemed anxious to recede
-from almost every position it had won in the recent
-election, the South was too confident of its strength
-and of the justice of its cause to give much encouragement
-to the messengers of peace from the other
-side. The situation just described is an interesting
-illustration of the characteristic difference between
-the people of the North and the South on every
-question in which the Negro was involved. The
-North was very reluctant to make slavery an issue;
-the South was always willing to be challenged on
-that issue. In the North, the Negro was a problem;
-in the South, he was property. It is always easier
-to deal with property than to deal with a problem.
-For example: In the Kansas and Nebraska controversy,
-the South wanted territory for slave-property,
-and the North wanted it as an outlet for New England
-emigrants. If the only question involved had
-been to save the black man from further enslavement,
-the South would very possibly have won. In
-other words, interest in the Negro as a human being,
-deserving a chance to live and grow, was not the
-only and perhaps not the immediate motive behind
-the men who fought for free soil. Slavery was fundamental
-and therefore, from the point of view of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_215'>215</span>party politics, a dangerous issue. There were men
-in the North and also in the South who for conscience’
-sake would like to have seen the Negro
-emancipated, but the nation was not yet ready for
-it. It involved consequences so vast and so far-reaching
-that the mass of the people hesitated and
-were afraid. In the state of the country at that
-time, the political parties of the North were anxious
-to make it appear to the South that they had little
-or no concern about the Negro, either as a freeman
-or a slave. Their great anxiety was to save the
-Union. Mr. Lincoln was politically wise enough to
-state that his administration was in no way committed
-to emancipation or to anything else that
-looked to a change in the condition of the Negro
-people. He would save the Union with or without
-slavery. He would very likely have found himself
-lacking in national confidence or support, had he
-failed to make this declaration.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>When the South decided to go out of the Union,
-it furnished the President with the one thing needed
-and that was a platform on which he could unite
-the people of the North. When his policy was distinctly
-the preservation of the government, Free
-Soil Democrats, Abolitionists, and all believers in
-an undivided country, came at his call. All sentiment
-in favor of emancipation served only to swell
-the passionate appeal to the national feeling to save
-the Union. The Negro’s only hope was that, in this
-threatened conflict to preserve intact the federation
-of the states, his emancipation might become an
-inevitable necessity.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_216'>216</span>Frederick Douglass expressed this hope in the
-following language: “I confess to a feeling allied to
-satisfaction at the prospect of a conflict between the
-North and South. Standing outside of the pale of
-American humanity, denied citizenship, unable to
-call this land of my birth my country, and adjudged
-by the Supreme Court to have no rights which a
-white man was bound to respect, and longing for the
-end of bondage for my people, I was ready for any
-political upheaval that would bring about an end to
-the existing condition of things.”</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_217'>217</span>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER XII<br> <span class='large'>DOUGLASS’S SERVICES IN THE CIVIL WAR</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c003'>The Civil War came on as the direct result of the
-irreconcilable sentiments of the North and the South
-on the question of slavery and the political conflicts
-already mentioned. On the part of the South, it
-was begun and waged with marvelous courage and
-intelligence to preserve slavery and to establish the
-right of secession; and on the part of the North, to
-preserve the Union, and the right of Congress to
-deal with slavery as a national issue. During the
-first two years of the war, the Federal Government
-did and said everything possible to convince the
-people of the South that the new Republican party
-had no intention, near or remote, of interfering with
-slavery. At the very beginning of hostilities, William
-H. Seward, Secretary of State, declared to the
-nations of the world that “terminate however it
-might, the status of no class of people of the United
-States would be changed by the Rebellion; that the
-slaves would be slaves still and that the masters
-would be masters still.” This policy was consistently
-followed in the field of military operations, as
-well as in the civil administration of the government.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>General McClellan, Commander-in-Chief of the
-Union Army, early in the conflict, warned the
-slaves that “if any attempt was made by them to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_218'>218</span>gain their freedom, it would be suppressed by an
-iron hand.” In many places Union soldiers were
-detailed to guard the plantations of Southern slave-owners.
-In parts of the South in possession of the
-Federal army, black fugitives, who had found their
-way into the lines, were returned to their masters by
-order of the commanding officers. The following
-is a copy of the proclamation issued by General
-T. W. Sherman at Port Royal in November, 1861:</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“In obedience to the order of the President of these
-United States of America, I have landed on your
-shores with a small force of national troops. The
-dictates of duty which, under the Constitution, I
-owe to a great sovereign state, and to a proud and
-hospitable people, among whom I have passed some
-of the pleasantest days of my life, prompt me to
-proclaim that we have come among you with no
-feelings of personal animosity; no desire to harm
-your citizens, destroy your property or interfere
-with your lawful rights or your social and local institutions
-beyond what the cause herein briefly attended
-to, may render unavoidable.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>This proclamation is typical of those issued by
-General John A. Dix, General Burnside, and other
-Union commanders in different parts of the South.
-All this was in perfect accord with President Lincoln’s
-oft-repeated declaration, that his paramount
-object was to save the Union and not to save or destroy
-slavery. “If I could save the Union, without
-freeing the slaves, I would do it,” said he. “If I
-could do it by freeing some and leaving others
-alone, I would also do that. What I do about
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_219'>219</span>slavery and the colored race, I do because I believe
-it helps to save the Union, and what I forbear,
-I forbear because I do not believe it would
-help to save the Union.... I have here
-stated my purpose according to my views of official
-duty, and I intend no modification of my oft-expressed
-wish that all men everywhere could be
-free.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>This declaration of President Lincoln was reflected
-in every act of every agency of his administration.
-It gave the cause of the Union a spirit and character
-wholly apart from the cause of Emancipation.
-It is needless to say that this attitude of the Federal
-government was not pleasing to the Abolitionists,
-and the colored people in the free-states were much
-disheartened. Horace Greeley voiced the impatience
-of this element when, in a letter of complaint
-to the President, he said: “Every hour of defense
-of slavery is an hour of added and deepened peril to
-the Union;” and asked, “if the seeming subserviency
-of your policy to the slave-holding, slavery-upholding
-interests, is not the perplexity and the
-despair of statesmen of all parties?”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In spite of the seeming pro-slavery policy of the
-national administration, Frederick Douglass was
-earnestly consecrating every energy of his being to
-the President’s support. He was wise enough to
-understand that if Lincoln in the beginning, had
-stated his policy to be, not only to save the Union,
-but also to free the slaves, all would have been lost.
-While other Abolitionists were impatient and
-doubtful of Mr. Lincoln’s course, Douglass declared
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_220'>220</span>himself convinced that the war, even though it
-be called a “white man’s war,” was nevertheless
-the beginning of the end of the nation’s great evil.
-He still believed, and so declared in his public
-speeches, that “the mission of the war was the liberation
-of the slaves as well as the salvation of the
-Union.” “I reproached the North,” he said,
-“that they fought with one hand, while they might
-strike more effectively with two; that they fought
-with the soft white hand, while they kept the black
-iron hand chained and helpless behind them; that
-they fought the effect, while they protected the
-cause; and said that the Union cause would never
-prosper until the war assumed an anti-slavery attitude
-and the Negro was enlisted on the side of the
-Union.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>It required time and the cumulation of events to
-bring about a state of feeling that would tolerate the
-suggestion of using colored men in the Union army.
-Mr. Douglass more than any other one man, helped
-to bring about this change. It finally became evident
-that if the Negroes were good enough to be
-employed in the Confederate ranks, as laborers,
-they ought to be good enough for like service in the
-Union lines. In the South, thousands of Negroes
-were at home, protecting the families of the men
-who fought in the field, and raising crops as subsistence
-for the Confederate soldiers and their wives
-and children; thousands more were employed in
-building fortifications, digging trenches, and doing
-work which otherwise would have had to be done
-by the men who were needed at the front; and,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_221'>221</span>anomalous as it may seem, a few colored men, it is
-said, were actually enrolled and enlisted as soldiers
-in the Confederate army, fighting for their own continued
-enslavement. The following account was
-published of a procession of Southern troops in New
-Orleans in November, 1861: “Over 28,000 troops
-were reviewed by Governor Moore, Major-General
-Scoville, and Brigadier-General Ruggles. The line
-was over seven miles long. One regiment comprised
-1,400 free colored men.”<a id='r4'></a><a href='#f4' class='c017'><sup>[4]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f4'>
-<p class='c004'><a href='#r4'>4</a>. Greeley: <cite>The American Conflict</cite>, Vol. II, p. 522.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c004'>It was expedient that the government, in enlisting
-Negroes, should move with extreme caution, not
-only to prevent undue irritation of Southern feeling,
-but what was more serious, to avoid offending
-the deep-seated prejudice against colored people in
-the North. It was rightly believed that thousands
-of white men would refuse to enlist if Negroes were
-to serve in the army on an even footing with them.
-Then again, the border states, which were more or
-less favorable to the Union, would be irrevocably
-lost to it. In due time, however, all objections were
-swept aside by the pressure of black men themselves
-and by the needs of the government.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Correspondents from the seat of war began to tell
-how a Negro regiment at Port Royal, and certain
-Negro companies in Louisiana had conducted themselves
-in battles for the Union, and these accounts
-dispelled all doubts as to their fighting capacity.
-The early orders by the government to return all
-fugitive slaves to their masters were no longer issued.
-General Benjamin P. Butler announced that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_222'>222</span>he would regard all fugitive slaves, finding their
-way into his lines, as “contraband of war.” Colored
-men were being employed extensively as
-laborers in building fortifications, roads, entrenchments,
-and as cooks and other necessary workers in
-support of the army. Their usefulness was so manifest
-that prejudice gradually gave way to a more
-kindly feeling of respect. When the white Union
-troops thus recognized the services, kindness, and
-faithfulness of these black men, they were soon
-willing to tolerate them in their ranks.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Mr. Douglass eagerly assisted in the formation of
-the first regularly organized regiments of United
-States colored troops, the Fifty-fourth and Fifty-fifth
-Massachusetts Infantry Volunteers. Governor
-Andrew, an ardent Abolitionist, was justly proud
-of this important experiment, and said: “I stand
-or fall as a man and a magistrate with the rise or
-fall in the history of the Fifty-fourth Massachusetts.”
-Colonel Robert Gould Shaw, who commanded
-the regiment, was one of the noblest sons
-of this freedom-loving commonwealth.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In order to satisfy any lingering misgivings that
-the people might have concerning this step by the
-government, it was stated that the regiments to
-be enlisted would not be put into active service, being
-held for garrison duty in districts where yellow
-fever was prevalent. It was also decided not to
-give them the same pay as that allowed to the
-white troops. Negro soldiers were to receive only
-seven dollars per month. At Fort Wagner the
-Fifty-fourth Massachusetts soon had an opportunity
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_223'>223</span>to show what it could do. The conduct of the men
-was so brave that it put an end to all further opposition
-to Negro enlistment. These colored soldiers
-refused to accept any reward for their services
-until the government was ready to pay them what
-it gave to other troops. They continued to serve
-and fight for the honor of the flag and the preservation
-of the Union until in the following year the
-country voted full pay to its black defenders. The
-Massachusetts volunteers, and all Negro regiments
-subsequently enlisted, were officered by white men.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Mr. Douglass rendered valuable aid in getting together
-enough fit men for the two New England
-regiments. His two sons, Lewis H. and Charles R.
-Douglass, who are still living in Washington and are
-honored citizens, were among the first to enlist.
-Their father’s influence with the colored people
-of the country was so great that his services were
-almost indispensable. He was distressed by the restrictions
-placed on these soldiers, but said: “While
-I, of course, was deeply pained and saddened by
-the estimate thus put upon my race, and grieved at
-the slowness of heart which marked the conduct of
-the loyal government, I was not discouraged, and
-urged every man who could enlist to get an eagle on
-his button, a musket on his shoulder, and the star
-and spangle over his head.” On March 2, 1863, he
-issued an appeal to his people which was in part as
-follows:</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“Men of Color, To Arms.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“When first the rebel cannon shattered the walls
-of Sumter and drove away its starving garrison, I
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_224'>224</span>predicted that the war then and there inaugurated
-would not be fought out entirely by white men.
-Every month’s experience during these dreary years
-has confirmed that opinion. I have implored the
-imperiled nation to unchain against her foes her
-powerful black hand. Slowly and reluctantly that
-appeal is beginning to be heeded. Stop not now to
-complain that it was not heeded sooner. That it
-should not, may or may not have been best. This
-is not the time to discuss that question. Leave it to
-the future. When the war is over, the country
-saved, peace established, and the black man’s
-rights are secured, as they will be, history with an
-impartial hand will dispose of that and sundry
-other questions. Action! action! not criticism, is
-the plain duty of this hour. Words are now useful
-only as they stimulate to blows. The office of speech
-now is only to point out when, where and how to
-strike to the best advantage. From East to West,
-from North to South, the sky is written all over,
-‘Now or Never.’ Liberty won only by white men
-will lose half its lustre. ‘Who would be free, must
-themselves strike the blow.’ ‘Better, even to die
-free, than to live slaves.’ This is the sentiment of
-every brave colored man amongst us. There are
-weak and cowardly men in all races. We
-have them amongst us. They tell you this is a
-‘white man’s war’; that you will ‘be no better
-off after the war, than you were before the
-war’; that the ‘getting of you into the army is to
-sacrifice you on the first opportunity.’ Believe
-them not. Cowards themselves, they do not wish
-to have their cowardice shamed by your example.
-Leave them to their timidity, or to whatever motive
-may hold them back. I have not thought lightly of
-the words I am now addressing to you. The counsel
-I give comes of close observation of the great
-struggle now in progress, and of the deep conviction
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_225'>225</span>that this is your hour and mine. In good earnest,
-then, and after the best deliberation, I now, for
-the first time during this war, feel at liberty to call
-and counsel you to arms. By every consideration
-which binds you to your enslaved fellow countrymen,
-and to the peace and welfare of your country;
-by every aspiration which you cherish for the freedom
-and equality of yourselves and your children;
-by all the ties of blood and identity which make us
-one with the brave black men now fighting our
-battles in Louisiana and in South Carolina, I urge
-you to fly to arms, and smite with death the power
-that would bury the government and your liberty
-in the same hopeless grave. I wish I could tell
-you that the state of New York calls you to this
-high honor. For the moment her constituted authorities
-are silent on the subject. They will speak
-by and by, and doubtless on the right side, but we
-are not compelled to wait for her. We can get at
-the throat of treason and slavery through the state
-of Massachusetts. She was first in the War of Independence;
-first to break the chains of her slaves;
-first to make the black man equal before the law;
-first to admit colored children to her common
-schools; and she was first to answer with her blood
-the alarm-cry of the nation, when its capital was
-menaced by rebels. You know her patriotic governor,
-and you know Charles Sumner. I need not
-add more.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“Massachusetts now welcomes you to arms as soldiers.
-She has but a small colored population from
-which to recruit. She has full leave of the general
-government to send one regiment to the war, and
-she has undertaken to do it. Go quickly and help fill
-up the first colored regiment from the North. I am
-authorized to assure you that you will receive the
-same wages, the same rations, the same equipments,
-the same protection, the same treatment, and the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_226'>226</span>same bounty, secured to white soldiers. You will
-be led by able and skilful officers, men who will
-take special pride in your efficiency and success.
-They will be quick to accord to you all the honor
-you shall merit by your valor, and to see that your
-rights and feelings are respected by other soldiers.
-I have assured myself on these points. More than
-twenty years of unswerving devotion to our common
-cause may give me some humble claim to be
-trusted at this momentous crisis. I will not argue.
-To do so implies hesitation and doubt, and you do
-not hesitate; you do not doubt. The day dawns.
-The morning star is bright upon the horizon. The
-iron gate of our prison stands half open. One
-gallant rush from the North will fling it wide open,
-while four millions of our brothers and sisters shall
-march out into liberty.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“The chance is now given you to end in a day the
-bondage of centuries and to rise in one bound from
-social degradation to the place of common equality
-with all other varieties of men. Remember Denmark
-Vesey, of Charleston; remember Shields
-Green, and Copeland, who followed noble John
-Brown, and fell as glorious martyrs for the cause of
-the slave. Remember that in a contest with oppression,
-the Almighty has no attribute which can take
-sides with the oppressors. The case is before you.
-This is our golden opportunity. Let us accept it
-and forever wipe out the dark reproaches unsparingly
-hurled against us by our enemies. Let us win
-for ourselves the gratitude of our country, and the
-best blessings of our posterity through all time.
-The nucleus of this first regiment is now in camp at
-Readville, a short distance from Boston. I will undertake
-to forward to Boston all persons adjudged
-fit to be mustered into the regiment, who shall apply
-to me at once, or at any time within the next
-two weeks.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_227'>227</span>The immediate effect of the enlistment of colored
-troops in the Union army was to call forth
-a feeling of resentment on the part of the white
-soldiers of the South. It is asking too much
-of human nature to have expected anything
-else. The prejudice instantly found official expression
-in the proclamation by the Confederate
-government that it would treat white officers of
-colored troops and colored soldiers when captured,
-as felons; Negro Union prisoners would be shot or
-sent back to slavery. This threat was literally
-carried out in several instances. For nearly a year
-the Confederate armies pursued this course toward
-black men who were caught wearing the uniform of
-a Union soldier.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>During all this time the Federal government was
-silent: no word of protest and no threat of retaliation.
-Horace Greeley in the <cite>Tribune</cite> put the matter
-in strong terms when he stated that “every black
-soldier now goes to battle with a halter about
-his neck.... The simple question is, Shall we
-protect and insure to our Negro soldiers the ordinary
-treatment of a prisoner of war? Every Negro
-yet captured has suffered death or been sent back to
-the hell of slavery, from which he had escaped.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The colored people in the North were for a time
-thoroughly discouraged. The government, it seemed
-to them, put a low estimate upon them as soldiers.
-When Mr. Douglass was appealed to by Major
-George L. Stearns, an Abolitionist, and friend of
-John Brown, he expressed himself in part as
-follows:</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_228'>228</span>“I am free to say, dear sir, that the case looks as
-if the confiding colored soldiers had been betrayed
-into bloody hands by the government in whose defense
-they had been so heroically fighting....
-If the President is ever to demand justice and
-humanity for black soldiers, is not this the time for
-him to do it? How many Fifty-fourth men must be
-cut to pieces, its mutilated prisoners killed and the
-living sold into slavery or tortured to death by inches,
-before Mr. Lincoln shall say, ‘Hold! Enough’?”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Appeals of this kind finally had the effect of moving
-the government to action. In order himself to
-be sure as to just what it intended to do, and before
-inducing any other colored men to go to the front,
-Mr. Douglass made up his mind to see the President
-personally. It was, at this time, an unheard-of
-thing for a colored man to go to the White House
-with a grievance, but he had many influential
-friends and admirers in Washington, who assured
-him that he would be well treated. Senators
-Sumner, Wilson, and Pomeroy; Secretary of the
-Treasury Salmon P. Chase, Assistant Secretary of
-War Dana, all guaranteed him a safe passage into
-Mr. Lincoln’s presence. Senator Pomeroy introduced
-Mr. Douglass, and they soon found that they
-had much in common. The one had traveled a long
-hard journey from the slave-cabin of Maryland, and
-the other a thorny road from the scant and rugged
-life in Kentucky, to the high position of President.
-The one was too great to be a slave, and the other
-too noble to remain, in such a national crisis, a private
-citizen. Mr. Douglass’s account of this historic
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_229'>229</span>interview with the President, the first instance of
-the kind, I believe, in the history of the country, is
-worth reproducing:</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“I was accompanied to the Executive Mansion
-and introduced to President Lincoln by Senator
-Pomeroy. Long lines of care were already deeply
-written on Mr. Lincoln’s brow, and his strong face
-lighted up as soon as my name was mentioned. As
-I approached and was introduced to him, he arose
-and extended his hand and bade me welcome. I at
-once felt that I was in the presence of an honest
-man—one whom I could love, honor, and trust
-without reserve or doubt. Proceeding to tell him
-who I was and what I was doing, he promptly but
-kindly stopped me, saying, ‘I know who you are,
-Mr. Douglass; Mr. Seward has told me about you.
-Sit down. I am glad to see you.’ I then told him
-the object of my visit; that I was assisting to raise
-colored troops; that several months before I had
-been very successful in getting men to enlist, but
-that now it was not easy to induce the colored men
-to enter the service because there was a feeling
-among them that the government did not, in several
-respects, deal fairly with them. Mr. Lincoln asked
-me to state particulars. I replied that there were
-three particulars which I wished to bring to his
-attention. First, that colored soldiers ought to receive
-the same wages as those paid to white soldiers.
-Second, that colored soldiers ought to receive the
-same protection when taken prisoners, and be exchanged
-as readily and on the same terms as any
-other prisoners, and that, if Jefferson Davis should
-shoot or hang colored soldiers in cold blood, the
-United States government should, without delay,
-retaliate in kind and degree upon Confederate
-soldiers in its hands as prisoners. Third, when colored
-soldiers, seeking ‘the bubble reputation, at the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_230'>230</span>cannon’s mouth’ performed great and uncommon
-service on the battle-field, they should be rewarded
-by distinction and promotion precisely as white
-soldiers are rewarded for like services.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“Mr. Lincoln listened with patience and silence
-to all I had to say. He was serious and even
-troubled by what I had said and by what he himself
-had evidently before thought upon the same
-points. He, by his silent listening, not less than by
-his earnest reply to my words, impressed me with
-the solid gravity of his character.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“He began by saying that the employment of
-colored troops at all was a great gain to the colored
-people; that the measure could not have been successfully
-adopted at the beginning of the war; that
-the wisdom of making colored men soldiers was still
-doubted; that their enlistment was a serious offense
-to popular prejudice; that they had larger motives
-for being soldiers than white men; that they ought
-to be willing to enter the service upon condition;
-that the fact that they were not to receive the same
-pay as white soldiers seemed a necessary concession
-to smooth the way to their employment at all as
-soldiers, but that ultimately they would receive the
-same. On the second point, in respect to equal protection
-he said the case was more difficult. Retaliation
-was a terrible remedy, and one which it was very
-difficult to apply; that, if once begun, there was no
-telling where it would end; that if he could get
-hold of the Confederate soldiers who had been guilty
-of treating colored soldiers as felons he could easily
-retaliate, but the thought of hanging men for a
-crime perpetrated by others was revolting to his
-feelings. He thought that the rebels themselves
-would stop such barbarous warfare; that less evil
-would be done if retaliation were not resorted to and
-that he had already received information that colored
-soldiers were being treated as prisoners of war.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_231'>231</span>In all this I saw the tender heart of the man rather
-than the stern warrior and commander-in-chief of
-the American army and navy, and while I could not
-agree with him, I could but respect his humane
-spirit.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“On the third point he seemed to have less difficulty,
-though he did not absolutely commit himself.
-He simply said that he would sign any commission
-to colored soldiers whom his Secretary of War
-should commend to him. Though I was not entirely
-satisfied with his views, I was so well satisfied with
-the man and with the educating tendency of the conflict
-that I determined to go on with the recruiting.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>From the White House, Mr. Douglass went
-directly to the War Department and had an interview
-with Stanton. Contrary to his expectation, he
-found the Secretary most cordial, listening to the
-complaints with interest and patience. Douglass
-says that Stanton made “the best defense that I
-had heard from any one of the treatment of colored
-soldiers by the government. I was not satisfied,
-yet I left in the full belief that the true course
-to the black man’s freedom and citizenship was over
-the battle-field and that my business was to get
-every black man I could into the Union army.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“Both the President and Secretary assured me
-that justice would ultimately be done to my race
-and,” he adds, “I gave full credit and faith to
-these promises.” He was now better than ever
-prepared to say to his people that, if they would
-be free, they must not be afraid to suffer injustice
-and, if need be, cruelty.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In his interview with Mr. Stanton, the question
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_232'>232</span>came up as to the advisability of commissioning
-colored men as officers of colored regiments. The
-Secretary expressed his willingness and readiness
-to issue a commission to Mr. Douglass, if he would
-accept. On being assured that he would, Stanton
-promised to make him assistant adjutant to General
-Thomas, who was recruiting and organizing
-troops in Mississippi. He returned to his home in
-Rochester, N. Y., confidently expecting that the
-commission would be sent him, but for some reason,
-not explained, it was never issued. Mr. Douglass’s
-only comment on this lapse of the Secretary of War
-was: “The government, I fear, was still clinging
-to the idea that positions of honor in the service
-should be occupied by white men and that it would
-not do to inaugurate the policy of perfect equality.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>At length the outlook improved. Signs appeared
-of better treatment of the colored soldiers by the
-Confederate armies. On July 30, 1863, President
-Lincoln issued an order “that for every soldier of
-the United States killed in violation of the laws of
-war, a rebel soldier shall be executed; and for every
-one enslaved by the enemy or sold into slavery, a
-rebel soldier shall be placed at hard labor on the
-public works.” All the Union generals readily
-coöperated with the President’s efforts to have his
-black troops receive equal consideration. General
-Grant was especially interested in this matter and
-gave instructions to the white men in his ranks to
-treat the colored soldiers as comrades.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The Negro troops, by their soldierly qualities,
-displayed at Fort Wagner, Vicksburg, Port Hudson,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_233'>233</span>Morris Island, and other places, had fully earned
-the right to honorable treatment, and such deserving
-had its good effects. When the government
-finally recognized the services of its black defenders,
-there was no trouble in getting the colored men to
-enlist. From each state and territory in and out
-of the Union, they offered themselves to the Federal
-government with as much eagerness as if they were
-already in possession of every right they hoped to
-receive.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The following table of figures will show how
-largely black men responded to President Lincoln’s
-call to the defense of the Union:</p>
-
-<table class='table1'>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Connecticut</td>
- <td class='c023'>1,764</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Maine</td>
- <td class='c023'>104</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Massachusetts</td>
- <td class='c023'>3,966</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>New Hampshire</td>
- <td class='c023'>125</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Rhode Island</td>
- <td class='c023'>1,837</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Vermont</td>
- <td class='c023'>120</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>New Jersey</td>
- <td class='c023'>1,185</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>New York</td>
- <td class='c023'>4,125</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Pennsylvania</td>
- <td class='c023'>8,612</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Colorado</td>
- <td class='c023'>95</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Illinois</td>
- <td class='c023'>1,811</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Indiana</td>
- <td class='c023'>1,537</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Iowa</td>
- <td class='c023'>440</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Kansas</td>
- <td class='c023'>2,080</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Minnesota</td>
- <td class='c023'>104</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Michigan</td>
- <td class='c023'>1,387</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Ohio</td>
- <td class='c023'>5,092</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Wisconsin</td>
- <td class='c023'>165</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Delaware</td>
- <td class='c023'>954</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>District of Columbia</td>
- <td class='c023'>3,269</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Kentucky</td>
- <td class='c023'>23,703</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Maryland</td>
- <td class='c023'>8,718</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Missouri</td>
- <td class='c023'>8,344</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>West Virginia</td>
- <td class='c023'>196</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Alabama</td>
- <td class='c023'>4,969</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Arkansas</td>
- <td class='c023'>5,526</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_234'>234</span>Florida</td>
- <td class='c023'>1,044</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Louisiana</td>
- <td class='c023'>3,480</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Mississippi</td>
- <td class='c023'>17,869</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>North Carolina</td>
- <td class='c023'>5,035</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>South Carolina</td>
- <td class='c023'>5,462</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Tennessee</td>
- <td class='c023'>20,123</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Texas</td>
- <td class='c023'>47</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>At large</td>
- <td class='c023'>733</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Not accounted for</td>
- <td class='c023'>5,083</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>Officers</td>
- <td class='c023'>7,122</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
- <td class='c023'><hr></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c024'>Total</td>
- <td class='c023'>186,017<a id='r5'></a><a href='#f5' class='c017'><sup>[5]</sup></a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f5'>
-<p class='c004'><a href='#r5'>5</a>. <cite>History of the Negro Race in America</cite>, George W. Williams,
-Vol. II, p. 299.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c004'>In addition to this impressive total it is estimated
-that there were about 92,576 colored men serving
-with regiments in other capacities. That the
-Negroes proved to be good soldiers, whenever or
-wherever their fibre was put to trial, is the unvarying
-testimony of every officer and commander who
-had any opportunity to know their conduct in the
-field. The exigencies of the war were such that the
-troops thus furnished were sorely needed. The
-whole fighting strength of the North was none too
-great to cope with the Southern armies, and the
-enlistment of black men was effected at a critical
-moment in the struggle.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>From another point of view, this employment of
-colored troops with their good conduct on the field
-was an important event in the history of the Negro.
-It was the first opportunity given to him to demonstrate,
-on a large scale, that he was superior to the
-estimate put upon him at that time by the American
-people. The current of popular feeling against the
-race rapidly changed. The Southern soldiers also
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_235'>235</span>altered their attitude when they discovered in black
-skin courage and character worthy of honor and
-respect.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>On both sides of the firing-line the colored men
-proved themselves to be friends of the white race.
-They shrank from no danger, however great; they
-refused no task, however difficult; but worked, and
-fought, and died without complaint. Negro men
-and women, as non-combatants, secretly fed, hid,
-and protected thousands of Union soldiers who were
-in perilous positions and without a friend or hope
-of favor in a hostile country. Many a man in blue
-owed life and liberty to the nursing and protection
-of some tender-hearted slave. It was to the care
-and devotion of these same humble folk that the
-Southern masters, when summoned to war, entrusted
-the cultivation of their lands and the lives and
-property of their families. The Negro was the
-“good Samaritan” in those terrible days, when
-white men were savagely bent upon destroying one
-another.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The armies on both sides of the conflict were indebted
-to the black man as friend and as fighter.
-In the South, he fought against himself; in the
-North, he fought for himself. In helping to save
-the Union by his service and by his death on battlefields,
-he put himself in a position to claim a share
-in the fruits of reëstablished peace, and in the good-will
-of a reunited country. In view of his recorded
-part in this civil contest, it can never be said that
-the Negro was a mere passive recipient of the freedom
-that came to all the members of his race.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_236'>236</span>After the government had fully committed itself
-to the policy of enlisting colored men in the Union
-army, the struggle began to assume the character of
-a war for liberty. It became so as a military necessity.
-President Lincoln’s Proclamation of Emancipation,
-issued on the first day of January, 1863,
-sounded the death-knell of slavery, and was an
-expression of a changed attitude on the part of the
-government and of the people generally, foretelling
-the end of the war.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The President had been criticised by the Abolitionists,
-because he chose to fight battles for the
-preservation of the Union, rather than for the extirpation
-of slavery. If Douglass had ever faltered in
-his faith in Mr. Lincoln’s desire for Abolition, he
-was reassured by an incident which occurred at this
-time. Shortly after the Proclamation was issued,
-the President summoned him to the White House.
-He reports that Mr. Lincoln was somewhat anxious
-because the slaves in the South were not coming into
-the Union lines as fast as he expected and wished.
-He said that he might be forced into arrangements
-for peace before his purposes could be realized, and
-if so, he wanted the greatest possible number of
-slaves within the territory of freedom. The President
-thought that Douglass could, in some way,
-bring his Proclamation to the knowledge of the
-Negroes, and organize raiding parties, which would
-aid them to escape from bondage and reach Union
-ground. Referring to this interview Mr. Douglass
-said:</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“Mr. Lincoln saw the danger of premature peace,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_237'>237</span>and like a thoughtful and sagacious man, he wished
-to provide means of rendering such consummation
-as harmless as possible. I was most impressed by
-this benevolent consideration because he had before
-said, in answer to the peace clamor, that his
-object was to save the Union.... What he
-said on this day showed a deeper moral conviction
-against slavery than I had ever seen before in anything
-spoken or written by him. I listened with
-the deepest interest and profoundest satisfaction and
-at his suggestion agreed to undertake the organization
-of a band of scouts,&#160;... and urge the
-slaves to come within our boundaries.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>This plan, however, was soon rendered unnecessary
-by Union victories in the field and a better
-military outlook.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Two incidents occurred at this meeting which
-showed the President’s strong and almost affectionate
-regard for Frederick Douglass. What these
-were are best told by Douglass himself. He says:
-“While in conversation with him, his secretary
-twice announced Governor Buckingham of Connecticut,
-one of the noblest and most patriotic of
-the loyal governors. Mr. Lincoln said: ‘Tell
-Governor Buckingham to wait, for I want to have a
-long talk with my friend, Frederick Douglass.’ I
-interposed and begged him to see the governor at
-once, as I could wait, but no, he persisted that he
-wanted to talk with me and that Governor Buckingham
-could wait.... In his company I was
-never in any way reminded of my humble origin, or
-of my unpopular color.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_238'>238</span>The other pleasing incident of this visit is likewise
-best told in Douglass’s own words: “At the
-door of my friend, John A. Gray, where I was stopping
-in Washington, I found one afternoon the carriage
-of Secretary Dole, and a messenger from
-President Lincoln with an invitation for me to take
-tea with him at the Soldiers’ Home, where he then
-passed his nights, riding out after the business of
-the day was over at the Executive Mansion. Unfortunately,
-I had an engagement to speak that
-evening and having made it one of the rules of my
-conduct in life never to break an engagement if possible
-to keep it, I felt obliged to decline the honor.
-I have often regretted that I did not make this an
-exception to my general rule. Could I have known
-that no such opportunity could come to me again, I
-should have justified myself in disappointing a
-large audience for the sake of a visit with Abraham
-Lincoln.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The Emancipation Proclamation, as Mr. Douglass
-at the time said, was “the turning point in the
-conflict between freedom and slavery.” He and his
-race lived through the first two years of the administration
-of the “party of liberty,” in a kind of
-agony of hope and doubt. What the colored race,
-North and South, wanted in a hurry came with
-slowness. As the time approached for the word of
-deliverance, the country was in a state of feverish
-excitement. For those who had been connected
-with the movement for Abolition, everything else,
-for the moment, seemed to lose its interest, its importance,
-and its value in the presence of this impending
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_239'>239</span>event. Indeed, the whole country vibrated
-with expectation.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In Tremont Temple, in Boston, on the day when
-Mr. Lincoln’s Proclamation was looked for, there
-was gathered a memorable company. Many of the
-most notable men in New England were present to
-join with the colored people in the song of jubilee.
-To quote Mr. Douglass: “A line of messengers
-was established between the telegraph office and the
-platform, and the time was occupied with brief
-speeches from Hon. Thomas Russell, Anna Dickinson,
-J. Sella Martin, William Wells Brown, and
-myself.... At last when patience was well-nigh
-exhausted and suspense was becoming agony,
-a man, I think Judge Russell, with hasty step advanced
-through the crowd and with a face fairly
-illumined with the news he bore, exclaimed, in
-tones that thrilled all hearts: ‘It is coming, it is
-on the wires.’ The effect of this announcement was
-startling beyond description, and the scene was wild
-and grand.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>When the message finally came and was read,
-there was a scene of indescribable rejoicing. The
-crowd was so crazy with excitement that midnight
-came upon them before they were aware of it and
-they adjourned to a colored Baptist church where the
-jubilation did not fully exhaust itself until morning.
-Mr. Douglass described it as “the most affecting and
-thrilling occasion I ever witnessed and a worthy
-celebration of the first step on the part of the nation
-in its departure from the thraldom of ages.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The Proclamation put new energy into all war
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_240'>240</span>measures and as the four years of Mr. Lincoln’s first
-administration approached the end, there was no
-one to oppose him for a renomination. His reëlection
-seemed to be an overwhelming vindication of
-his policy. Frederick Douglass was a prominent
-figure at the inauguration ceremonies and was looking
-gratefully and joyously up into the kindly face
-of the great President when he uttered these noble
-words: “Fondly do we hope, and fervently do we
-pray that this mighty scourge of war may speedily
-pass away. Yet if God wills that it continue
-until all the wealth piled by the bondsmen’s two
-hundred and fifty years of unrequited toil shall be
-sunk, and until every drop of blood drawn with the
-lash shall be paid for by another drawn with the
-sword, as was said three thousand years ago, so still
-it must be said, that ‘the judgments of the Lord are
-true and righteous altogether.’”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Speaking of this event Mr. Douglass said:</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“In the evening of the day of the inauguration,
-another new experience awaited me. The usual reception
-was given at the Executive Mansion, and
-though no colored person had ever ventured to present
-himself on such an occasion, it seemed, now
-that freedom had become the law of the republic,
-and colored men were on the battle-field mingling
-their blood with that of white men in one common
-effort to save the country, that it was not too great
-an assumption for a colored man to offer his congratulations
-to the President with those of other
-citizens. It is never an agreeable experience to go
-where there can be any doubt of welcome, and my
-colored friends had too often realized discomfiture
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_241'>241</span>from this cause to be willing to subject themselves
-to such unhappiness. It was plain, then, that some
-one must lead the way, and that if the colored man
-would have his rights, he must take them; and now,
-though it was plainly quite the thing for me to attend
-President Lincoln’s reception, they all with one
-accord began to make excuses. It was finally
-agreed that Mrs. Dorsey should bear me company,
-so together we joined in the grand procession of
-citizens from all parts of the country and moved
-slowly toward the Executive Mansion. Upon
-reaching the door, two policemen stationed there
-took me rudely by the arm and ordered me to stand
-back, for their directions were to admit no persons
-of my color. I told the officers I was quite sure
-there was some mistake for no such order could have
-emanated from President Lincoln; and that if he
-knew I was at the door, he would desire my admission.
-They then, to put an end to the parley, as I
-suppose, assumed an air of politeness, and offered
-to conduct me in. We followed their lead, and we
-soon found ourselves walking some planks out of a
-window, which had been arranged as a temporary
-passage for the exit of visitors. We halted as soon
-as we saw the trick, and I said to the officers, ‘You
-have deceived me. I shall not go out of this building
-till I see President Lincoln.’ At this moment a
-gentleman who was passing in, recognized me, and
-I said to him: ‘Be so kind as to say to Mr. Lincoln
-that Frederick Douglass is detained by officers at
-the door.’ It was not long before Mrs. Dorsey and
-I walked into the spacious East Room, amid a scene
-of elegance such as in this country I had never before
-witnessed. Like a mountain pine, high above
-all others, Mr. Lincoln stood, in his grand simplicity
-and home-like beauty. Recognizing me,
-even before I reached him, he exclaimed, so that all
-around could hear him, ‘Here comes my friend
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_242'>242</span>Douglass.’ Taking me by the hand, he said, ‘I am
-glad to see you. I saw you in the crowd to-day
-listening to my inaugural address. How did you
-like it?’ I said, ‘Mr. Lincoln, I must not detain
-you with my poor opinion, when there are thousands
-waiting to shake hands with you.’ ‘No, no,’
-he said, ‘you must stop a little, Douglass; there is
-no man in the country whose opinion I value more
-than yours. I want to know what you think of it.’
-I replied, ‘Mr. Lincoln, that was a sacred effort.’ ‘I
-am glad you liked it,’ he said; and I passed on,
-feeling that any man, however distinguished, might
-well regard himself honored by such expressions
-from such a man.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The events of the war moved rapidly toward the
-end and to peace. Mr. Douglass was in Boston
-when Richmond was captured. New England was
-more stirred over the fall of the Confederate capital
-than by any other single event of the war, except
-the Emancipation Proclamation. Faneuil Hall was
-again the scene of a great gathering. The victory
-was to be celebrated in song and speech. The governor
-of the state, Senator Wilson, and Robert C.
-Winthrop were among the speakers, and with them
-was Frederick Douglass. A meeting of this kind
-anywhere in New England would at that time have
-been incomplete without him. His presence on the
-platform, sharing honors with the patrician Winthrop,
-served to illustrate the change of fortunes
-that are possible under a democratic form of government.
-Less than twenty-five years before, Douglass,
-a fugitive from Maryland, had stood behind Mr.
-Winthrop’s chair at table as a waiter, at a dinner in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_243'>243</span>his honor in New Bedford. He had won the position
-he now occupied by his services to a people
-whose cause men in the North had come at length to
-recognize as their own, because it was the cause of
-humanity.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Mr. Douglass at this time had reason to feel not
-only joy but gratitude. It was clear that all he
-had hoped and struggled for was soon to be realized.
-The close of the war and the overthrow of the institution
-of slavery was for him a sort of personal victory.
-But his rejoicing was soon turned to mourning.
-At the time of the assassination of President
-Lincoln he was in Rochester, and he spoke at a meeting
-held to give expression to the sorrow which that
-event created. The circumstances are thus related
-by a friend:</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“Rochester court-house never held a larger crowd
-than was gathered to mourn over the martyred
-President. The meeting was opened by the most
-eloquent men at the bar and in the pulpit, with carefully
-prepared and earnestly uttered addresses. All
-the time the people were not aroused. Douglass,
-who told me that he would not speak because he
-was not invited, sat crowded in the rear. At last
-the feeling could be restrained no more; and his
-name burst upon the air from every side and filled
-the house. The dignified gentlemen who directed
-had to surrender. Then came the finest appeal in
-behalf of the father of his people, who had died for
-them especially, and would be mourned by them as
-long as one remained in America who had been a
-slave. I have heard Webster and Clay in their best
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_244'>244</span>moments; Channing and Beecher in their highest
-inspirations. I never heard truer eloquence; I
-never saw profounder impression. When he finished
-the meeting was done.”</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_245'>245</span>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER XIII<br> <span class='large'>EARLY PROBLEMS OF FREEDOM</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c003'>The close of the Civil War left many of the
-agencies of emancipation without a cause. The
-anti-slavery publications, the state and national
-anti-slavery societies, “vigilance committees,” and
-the vast Underground Railroad system, saw their
-purposes accomplished in the terms of peace. The
-American Anti-Slavery Society, which had been the
-longest in existence, and which, under the leadership
-of William Lloyd Garrison, had done more for
-freedom than any other single agency, was now
-ready to wind up its affairs. When a proposition
-was made for its dissolution, Frederick Douglass
-opposed it, giving his reasons in these words: “I
-felt that the work of the society was not done, that
-it had not fulfilled its mission, which was not
-merely to emancipate but to elevate the enslaved
-class&#160;... that the Negro still had a cause
-and that he needed my pen and voice to plead for
-it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In taking this position, he showed that he had a
-clear and far-reaching comprehension of the many
-and serious problems and obligations that would in
-time result from the enforced emancipation of his
-people. He clearly foresaw that these problems
-were of a kind which had never before come within
-the range and scope of our national experience, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_246'>246</span>that if the country were to make the most of the
-good results of the war, and minimize its evils, the
-machinery of liberation and destruction must somehow
-be converted to the service of peace and construction.
-Two great questions had been settled,
-that the United States was to remain an indivisible
-nation, and that slavery was henceforth impossible
-in this nation.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The problems growing out of these achievements
-are still difficult. Before the Civil War, the people
-of the United States might have been classified as
-non-slave-holding and slave-holding white people;
-enslaved and free Negroes. Now, two of these
-classes, the slave-holders and the enslaved Negroes,
-disappeared and in the latter’s stead, a new element
-was injected into the population, the freedmen,
-4,000,000 souls, utterly destitute, without learning,
-without experience, and without traditions; dependent
-for their guidance, and almost for bare existence,
-upon the direction and good-will of the
-older elements. If, after the war, the South and the
-North could have united to repair the damages and
-solve the problems the conflict had left behind it,
-the history of the colored people in America, as
-well as their present condition, might have been
-different from what it is.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In facing the problems of reconstruction, the
-people of the North had no precedents and little
-knowledge of the Negro’s character to guide them.
-The men who had the responsibility of providing
-for the present and future, of rehabilitating the
-South on the basis of freedom, were trained to treat
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_247'>247</span>every question, social and political, from the standpoint
-of party politics. But reconstruction needed
-the services of the sociologist more than of the
-party leader. There were but few in public life
-capable of treating these matters in a non-partisan,
-a non-sectional, and a scientific spirit. Men could
-not so quickly overcome the animosities engendered
-by the Civil War. Abraham Lincoln, who alone
-seemed to have a spirit large enough to be the President
-of all the people, even to the least of them, was
-gone, and there was none in public service to take his
-place. While others acted in the spirit of war, he
-acted in the spirit of peace. In managing large
-questions, he had a wonderful insight into the things
-that would aggravate conditions and a fine courage
-in avoiding them, until they had spent their force
-with as little harm as possible. His penetrative
-powers, the contagion of his kindly spirit, his unswerving
-love for what was just, were needed quite
-as much after as before and during the civil strife.
-Had Mr. Lincoln lived, his clear vision, it is safe to
-say, would have avoided many of the evils to which
-the country has since fallen heir. As it was, however
-much the white people in slavery’s former
-domain may have suffered, the Negro has borne the
-brunt of every mistake of the period of Reconstruction.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The Southern people had lost (so it seemed at the
-time at least) everything that was worth having and
-fighting for,—their “cause,” their property in
-slaves, their prestige, and their political supremacy.
-Their homes were devastated and their plantations
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_248'>248</span>ravaged by the conquering Yankees. Their task
-was not to build up what had been destroyed, but
-to begin anew. It is asking too much to expect
-that they could have faced these conditions with a
-cheerful spirit. The slaves, as property, were now
-free, and this freedom was regarded as a punishment
-visited upon their former masters.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Free labor was new, and apart from this there
-was none of it to take the place of that of the liberated
-slaves. Furthermore, the white people had
-little or no faith in their possible usefulness. They
-feared that the Negro as a free man would not
-work, would not honor his contracts, and would
-use his liberty to commit all sorts of crimes against
-society. They could not, at once, rid themselves of
-the feeling that physical compulsion was the only
-way to keep the Negro within the bounds of law
-and labor. Carl Schurz, who, under the authority
-of the President, made a very thorough and statesman-like
-investigation of conditions, issued an official
-report of his findings, and it is clear from this
-paper that, if the Southern people could have overcome
-their fears of Negro freedom, the work of reconstruction
-would have been greatly simplified.
-They, however, were in no frame of mind to accept
-and honor any program for reconstruction emanating
-from the North. They insisted that they alone
-knew the Negro and what was best to be done for
-him and with him.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Between the North and the South, stood the ex-slave,
-free and that was all. His situation was
-anomalous. As Mr. Douglass aptly says, “He was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_249'>249</span>free from individual masters, but the slave of society.”
-Yet, because of his long service to the
-country, either as a slave or a freeman, he deserved
-more than he could possibly have been paid in
-terms of law, defining and defending his rights.
-He was without power and, as Mr. Douglass
-in describing him, said, “a man without force, is
-without the essential dignity of human nature.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In this almost totally helpless condition, the
-North expected too much of him and the ex-masters
-too little. It required more than the shock of four
-years of internecine war to change the solidarity of
-slavery into a society of organized self-helpfulness.
-A people who had been so long enslaved could not
-help being slavish in habits and instincts. They
-had little family life, no society, no institution except
-the church, a rudimentary conception of common
-interests, and very few traditions and ideals.
-No race ever came into the domain of freedom, independence,
-and democracy so little furnished with
-the elements of self-protection and self-determining
-purpose, as did the emancipated slaves forty years
-ago. Yet there were everywhere in the South important
-exceptions to this condition of race helplessness.
-Many free colored people, especially in
-the cities, were not hopelessly behind in the procession
-of progress. They fully understood the meaning
-of the war and its results. When the last gun
-was fired and they saw emancipation as a reality,
-their joy was unbounded. In many of the Southern
-cities, thousands of them gathered in the open
-streets and commons, where they shouted and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_250'>250</span>prayed with full hearts, voicing in songs of jubilee
-and thanksgiving their gratitude for their great deliverance.
-There has been nothing like these
-demonstrations in the history of American liberty.
-No one who saw them could have any doubt whatever
-as to the Negro’s appreciation of his freedom.
-It is a notable fact that in none of them was
-ever heard a word of hatred or revenge toward
-those who had been responsible for their long enslavement.
-Their gratitude was too great to leave
-room for resentment. God, Lincoln, and Freedom
-formed a mysterious trinity in the new awakening
-of these emancipated people.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>All this was perfectly natural and hopeful, so far
-as it went, but it was not long before exultation
-gave way to the consciousness that this dearly
-bought liberty was a serious thing. The Negro
-capacity for happiness was large, but he could not
-live and sustain himself by this alone. Owning
-nothing, he had no place to live. Having nothing,
-he could get nothing. In addition to the ex-slaves,
-who were still fastened to the places where slavery
-left them and freedom found them, a great multitude,
-known as refugees, after emancipation made
-their way into the Union lines. When the war
-closed these were still with the Union army and dependent
-upon it for rations. It soon became apparent
-to those in authority, that something must
-be done in a large way by the Federal government
-itself to provide for this unorganized horde. To
-meet this serious condition, Congress, in the spring
-of 1865, passed an act establishing the “Freedmen’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_251'>251</span>Bureau for the Relief of Freedmen and Refugees.”
-Its main provisions were as follows:</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The Bureau was to have supervision and management
-of abandoned lands.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>It was to look after all subjects relating to refugees
-and freedmen.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>It was to be under the control of a commission
-appointed by the President and to continue its
-labors for one year after the close of the war.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The Secretary of War was given authority to issue
-provisions, clothing, and fuel for the immediate
-and temporary needs of freedmen and their wives
-and children.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>The War Department was to set apart for the
-use of loyal refugees and freedmen abandoned
-lands under the control of the United States Army
-and assign to such freedmen, not more than forty
-acres of land, and to protect such persons in the
-possession of such land for at least three years at an
-annual rent, not to exceed six per cent. upon the
-appraised value of the land. At the end of that
-time, the tenant was allowed to purchase it and receive
-therefor from the government a certificate of
-purchase.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In addition to these provisions, the Freedmen’s
-Bureau was intended to be a “friendly intermediary”
-between the ex-masters and ex-slaves. Nothing
-could have been done more surely to smooth the
-way for a kindly relationship between the two parties
-in question, if such a relationship had been
-possible. General O. O. Howard was the first commissioner
-of that Bureau. He had made a record
-as a soldier in the Union Army, but, better still, he
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_252'>252</span>was a man of humane impulses, without sectional
-bias, and of exalted Christian character. The value
-of his services in the work of Reconstruction can be
-easily seen by a glance at some of his reports made
-to Congress in 1865–1870.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In these five years of work on the part of the
-Bureau to bring order out of chaos, there had been
-established over 4,000 schools, employing 9,000
-teachers and giving instruction to about a quarter
-of a million pupils of all ages. In 1870 the school
-attendance in the old slave-states amounted to nearly
-eighty per cent. of the enrollment. The demand for
-learning on the part of the colored people, as shown
-by the Bureau’s work, was amazing, and afforded a
-gratifying evidence of their sense of responsibility as
-freedmen. The Negroes themselves made a good
-showing of what they were able to do by their own
-efforts in creating the means for their instruction.
-They sustained over 1,300 schools and built over 500
-school buildings, contributing more than $200,000
-out of their earnings to further the cause of education.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The value of the Freedmen’s Bureau in thus stimulating
-an interest in this important subject and in
-developing a serious sense of responsibility on the
-part of the freedmen cannot well be overestimated.
-Carl Schurz in his report says:</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“The Freedmen’s Bureau would have been an institution
-of the greatest value, under competent
-leadership, had not its organization, to some extent,
-been invaded by mentally and morally unfit persons....
-Nothing was needed at this time so
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_253'>253</span>much as an acknowledged authority, standing guard
-between the master and the ex-slave, commanding
-and possessing the confidence and respect of both,
-to aid the emancipated black man to make the best
-possible use of his unaccustomed freedom, and to
-aid the white man to whom free Negro labor was a
-well-nigh incurable idea, in meeting the difficulties,
-partly real and partly conjured up by the white
-man’s prejudiced imagination.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The lack of fit men, in sufficient numbers, to continue
-the good work inaugurated by the Freedmen’s
-Bureau was the cause, in great part, of the failure
-of Reconstruction methods of helpfulness. There
-were employed men of partisan spirit whose vision
-was clouded by political aspirations, and thus the
-future well-being of both races in the South was not
-kept paramount. The cause of most of the evils
-that in a few years followed and overwhelmed the
-colored people in the South, was lack of men strong
-in character, patriotism, justice, and understanding
-for the work in hand. This is true, in spite of the fact
-that there were those who were equal to the occasion,
-but who alone had not the power to perform the
-tasks set for them. No greater injury has been done
-the colored people of this country than that which
-resulted from putting them in a position of political
-antagonism to their former masters.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>But the purposes of this biography do not require
-a full statement of the causes that led to the overthrow
-of the temporary supremacy held by the
-freedmen and their Northern allies. A careful reading
-of the history of the Southern states since
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_254'>254</span>the adoption of the Thirteenth Amendment to the
-Constitution of the United States in 1865, must convince
-the impartial reader that the Negroes were
-less the instigators than the victims of the mistakes
-of Reconstruction. Many of those who played the
-false rôle of friends and leaders left the freedmen
-to bear the brunt of the punishment which they
-have since suffered patiently, heroically, and alone.
-The Negroes of the South during the Reconstruction
-period were always amenable to wise direction.
-Those who were on hand to guide them,
-easily won their favor. There seems to be no
-reason to doubt that, had it been offered, the freedmen
-would have followed the leadership of the best
-elements in the South as willingly, if not more
-willingly, than that which they did accept.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The difficulty was that the Southern people could
-not in a day, or in a decade, change their inborn
-conviction that emancipation was forced upon them
-as a punishment. They accepted this punishment
-in a spirit in which injured pride, the sense of loss
-of property, loss of “cause,” and revenge were elements.
-But with all these losses and defeats, the
-imperious temper of the Southern people suffered no
-impairment, and they were in no mood to take hold
-of the work of Reconstruction in the spirit of the
-victorious North.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The South hesitated to act, and the ex-slave had
-no power to do so. As a result, the responsibility
-for movements for the protection of the Negroes
-fell to the North. It sought to accomplish this object
-by giving freedmen all the rights of citizenship.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_255'>255</span>Under the presuppositions upon which
-our government was founded, this step was logical,
-even though it may have been, and indeed seems to
-have been, at that time unwise.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>What has been said in the foregoing pages indicates
-what may be called the new field of labor for
-Frederick Douglass after emancipation. When the
-great war came to an end and the object for which
-he had so long labored was indeed an accomplished
-fact, he confessed that his great joy was somewhat
-tinged with a feeling of sadness. He said, “I felt
-that I had reached the end of the noblest part of
-my life.” He was still in his prime, and all his
-faculties were clear and ready for action. He had
-no occupation, no business, no profession. His
-training and associations, during the previous thirty
-years, had unfitted him for manual labor, and he
-had no fortune that would enable him to live without
-exertion of some kind. But thoughts and feelings
-of this sort were soon swept aside by new
-interests and anxieties of the most absorbing character.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In the first place, fresh evidences of his popularity
-began to manifest themselves. His struggle for
-emancipation had been so conspicuous, his eloquence
-so stirring, and his participation in all the great
-questions of the day so earnest and compelling, that
-his vogue continued as before.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In the great diversity of distinguished men and
-women who figured in the history of the quarter of
-a century immediately preceding the Civil War,
-Frederick Douglass was in the fullest sense of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_256'>256</span>word, a “self-made man.” All kinds of persons
-were interested in him. His authority on every
-matter that concerned the Negro, North or South,
-was seldom questioned. His leadership, up to this
-time, was not often disputed. The American people
-manifested greater desire to hear him than ever
-before and invitations to lecture began to pour in
-upon him from colleges, lyceums, literary societies,
-and churches. It is scarcely too much to say that
-he was one of the most popular men on the lecture
-platform, and at a time when such illustrious personages
-as Henry Ward Beecher, Wendell Phillips,
-Theodore Tilton, Anna Dickinson, and Mary A.
-Livermore gave to the American lyceum its highest
-distinction. His themes were no longer anti-slavery
-in character. His new lectures bore such titles as,
-“Self-made Men,” “The Races of Men,” “William,
-the Silent,” “John Brown,” etc., all of which
-showed a wide reading, and a mastery of the art of
-eloquence. In addition to these lectures, he was
-called upon from every direction for informal talks
-on an almost endless variety of subjects.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>But whatever might be the theme or the occasion,
-he could not get away from the Negro problem. As
-he said, “I never rise to speak before any American
-audience, without a feeling that my failure or
-success will bring harm or benefit to my whole
-race.” When the all-important question of reconstruction
-came to be considered, Mr. Douglass was
-found to be fully conversant with the progress of
-events, prepared to say his word, and play his part.
-While other men were uncertain, confused, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_257'>257</span>timid, Douglass’s stand was bold, direct, and fearless.
-When it was time for him to speak and act,
-his words attracted wide attention and many persons
-in and out of Congress were willing to follow his
-leading. He had always been frank, honorable,
-and resourceful on the question of just treatment
-for his race and he was so far in advance of most
-of the men who had it in their power to make and
-unmake the laws, that it would have been a decided
-misfortune for the colored people to have been without
-his guidance. He had a wide acquaintance
-among men in public life. No other Negro in this
-country, at the time, knew political leaders in and
-out of Congress so intimately. His qualities of
-prudence and sagacity, as well as his great personal
-charm, made him welcome in the councils of his
-party. He was the soul of honor. Being thus
-gifted, Douglass was able to be as much for his
-people in a personal as in a public capacity. He
-had a way of getting close to the men in power and
-of reaching their hearts and enlisting their sympathies
-for the objects in whose service he was engaged.
-This was most fortunate. His race was without
-official connection with the government, without
-experience, and with no clearly defined status as
-citizens. If ever the colored people needed a strong
-man capable in every way to represent them, it was
-now, when the war was over and the question, what
-to do with the free Negro, must be answered in definite
-terms of law and governmental policy. Aside
-from his commanding abilities, and his personal attractiveness
-to men, Mr. Douglass had lived through
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_258'>258</span>the very experiences that fitted him to know and
-feel what the Negro needed and ought to have. He
-had been a slave, a fugitive slave, and a freedman,
-at a time, too, when Negro freedom was most despaired
-of. No white man could appreciate, as he
-could and did, the sweetness of the terms, Freedom
-and Liberty. One of his earliest utterances on this
-subject indicates his feeling at this period. “I saw
-no chance,” he said, “of bettering the condition of
-the freedman, until he should cease to be merely a
-freedman and should become a citizen, and that
-there was no safety for him or for anybody else in
-America, outside of the American government.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>At the time when Mr. Douglass publicly took
-this position, he was far more radical than some of
-the most ardent of his anti-slavery associates. This
-declaration was then regarded as a challenge to the
-sense of justice of the American people. Many
-earnest friends of the Negro thought it was asking
-too much, even though the race deserved the franchise.
-Others argued that the Negro was unfit for
-the suffrage and that it would aggravate the already
-strained relations between the two races in the
-South. Opposition was expected by Mr. Douglass
-and he was ready to meet it. No one understood
-better than he that his people had had no training
-for citizenship, but he was accustomed to say,
-that “if the Negro knows enough to fight for his
-country, he knows enough to vote; if he knows
-enough to pay taxes to support the government,
-he knows enough to vote; if he knows as much
-when sober as an Irishman knows when he is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_259'>259</span>drunk, he knows enough to vote.” He anticipated
-the evils that would follow the enfranchisement of
-the ex-slaves, but insisted that such evils would be
-temporary and that the good would be permanent.
-He further insisted that it was worth all the suffering
-endured by his race to have that principle
-established; that the right of suffrage would be an
-incentive to arouse the latent energies of the Negro
-to become worthy of full citizenship, and that such
-impulse was imperatively needed. He always declared
-that political equality was a widely different
-thing from social equality. He vigorously protested
-that the right of suffrage did not mean Negro
-domination in the slave-states, if the best white
-people would wisely assume the leadership of the
-blacks. He believed in the domination of the fittest,
-and insisted that the white people of the South,
-because of their superiority in intelligence and in
-all the forces that make for supremacy, were in no
-danger of being overwhelmed by the new voters.
-He believed in the rule of the competent and that
-in the long run intelligent supremacy would be
-tempered with justice and the true spirit of democracy.
-He believed that those who were strong
-enough, either to help the ex-slave to get upon his
-feet or to crush him in his efforts to rise, would
-choose the more generous course.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>At any rate, he deemed the time ripe to claim for
-the freedmen full citizenship and equality before
-the law. When the question came forward for discussion,
-the people of the North were filled with
-enthusiasm over the results of the war and for the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_260'>260</span>great objects they believed to have been achieved by
-it. It was the occasion to make a hero of every one
-who had taken part in the civil contest on the side
-of the Union. Even the Negro, for the first time, became
-the recipient of more than respectful consideration.
-The people of the North were as proud of
-his freedom as he was himself. If to give the Negro
-the franchise, and laws to protect him in the exercise
-of it as a citizen, would make more lasting the
-results of the war, the North was now in a mood to
-grant it to him, since it seemed to add to the significance
-of the great struggle which had just been
-so victoriously concluded. Douglass took advantage
-of this condition of things to advocate suffrage
-for his people. By speech and print and personal
-appeals to the leaders of public opinion, he urged
-this cause upon them in and out of season. There
-was no lack of evidence that it was gaining in every
-direction. The number of those who thought the
-suffrage ought to be granted, because it was right;
-those who thought it a good thing from a partisan
-standpoint, and those who thought the results of
-the war would be lost unless the Negro were given
-the privilege, increased rapidly.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>What Douglass calls one of the first steps in the
-direction of popular favor for universal suffrage,
-was an interview that he had with President Johnson
-on the 7th of March, 1866. He headed a delegation
-of prominent colored men, including George
-T. Downing, Lewis H. Douglass, William E. Matthews,
-John Jones, John F. Cook, Joseph E. Otis,
-A. W. Ross, William Whipper, John M. Brown,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_261'>261</span>and Alexander Dunlop. The visit of these black
-men to the President for the purpose of urging upon
-the government the policy of the franchise for the
-freedmen, attracted the attention of the entire nation.
-Nothing better could have been devised to bring the
-whole question before the people and obtain a hearing
-for it.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The delegation soon found that Mr. Johnson was
-not in sympathy with their plans for Negro enfranchisement.
-The President had evidently anticipated
-their purpose in calling upon him and he was fully
-prepared to answer their arguments. He spoke to
-them at great length and left no ground for them to
-doubt his position in the matter. He also gave
-them no opportunity to reply. On returning from
-the White House, his colleagues empowered Mr.
-Douglass to prepare an address to the public, to be
-printed simultaneously with Mr. Johnson’s address
-to them. Mr. Douglass’s paper was in the form of
-a reply to the President’s arguments against the
-suffrage proposition, and was as follows:</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“Mr. President:—In consideration of a delicate
-sense of propriety as well as of your own repeated
-intimations of indisposition to discuss or listen to a
-reply to the views and opinions you were pleased to
-express to us in your elaborate speech to-day, the
-undersigned would respectfully take this method of
-replying thereto.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“Believing as we do that the views and opinions
-you expressed in that address are entirely unsound
-and prejudicial to the highest interest of our race,
-as well as to our country at large, we cannot do
-other than expose the same and, as far as may be in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_262'>262</span>our power, arrest their dangerous influence. It is
-not necessary at this time to call attention to more
-than two or three features of your remarkable address.
-The first point to which we feel especially
-bound to take exception, is your attempt to found
-a policy opposed to our enfranchisement, upon the
-alleged ground of an existing hostility on the part
-of the former slaves to the poor white people of the
-South. We admit the existence of this hostility,
-and hold that it is entirely reciprocal. But you
-obviously commit an error by drawing an argument
-from an incident of slavery, and making it a basis
-for a policy adapted to a state of freedom. The
-hostility between the whites and blacks of the South
-is easily explained. It has its root and sap in the
-relation of slavery, and was incited on both sides by
-the cunning of the slave-masters. These masters secured
-their ascendency over both the poor whites
-and blacks by putting enmity between them.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“They divided both to conquer each. There was
-no earthly reason why the blacks should not hate
-and dread the poor whites when in a state of slavery,
-for it was from this class that their masters received
-their slave-catchers and slave-drivers and overseers.
-They were the men called in upon all occasions by
-the masters whenever any fiendish outrage was to
-be committed upon the slaves. Now, sir, you cannot
-but perceive that, the cause of this hatred removed,
-the effect must be removed also. Slavery is
-abolished. The cause of this antagonism is removed,
-and you must see that it is altogether illogical
-to legislate from slave-holding and slave-driving
-premises for a people, whom you have repeatedly
-declared it your purpose to maintain in freedom.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“Besides, if it were true, as you allege, that the
-hostility of the blacks toward the whites must
-necessarily project itself into a state of freedom, and
-that this enmity between the two races is even more
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_263'>263</span>intense in a state of freedom than in a state of
-slavery, in the name of Heaven, we reverently ask,
-how can you, in view of your proffered desire to
-promote the welfare of the black man, deprive him
-of all means of defense, and clothe him, whom you
-regard as his enemy, in the panoply of political
-power? Can it be that you recommend a policy
-which would arm the strong and cast down the defenseless?
-Can you, by any possibility of reasoning,
-regard this as just, fair, or wise? Experience
-proves that those are most abused who can be abused
-with the greatest impunity. Men are whipped
-oftenest who are whipped easiest. Peace between
-races is not to be secured by degrading one race and
-exalting another, by giving power to one and withholding
-from another, but by maintaining a state of
-equal justice between all classes. First pure, then
-peaceable.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“On the colonization theory you were pleased to
-broach, very much could be said. It is impossible
-to suppose, in view of the usefulness of the black
-man in time of peace as a laborer in the South and
-in time of war as a soldier in the North, and a growing
-respect for his rights among the people and his
-increasing adaptation to a high state of civilization
-in his native land, that there can ever come a time
-when he can be removed from this country without
-a terrible shock to its prosperity and peace. Besides,
-the worst enemy of the nation could not cast
-upon its fair name a greater infamy than to admit
-that Negroes could be tolerated among them in
-a state of the most degrading slavery and oppression,
-and must be cast away, driven to exile, for no
-other cause than having been freed from their
-chains.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>When the question reached Congress, the Negro
-was not lacking in friends who were willing to go
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_264'>264</span>the full length of the Frederick Douglass program
-of Reconstruction. The first step taken was a report
-made to the Senate by a committee having the
-subject in charge. This report in effect provided
-that the whole matter of franchise be left to the
-option of the several states concerned. Mr. Douglass
-believed he saw in this proposition the continued
-political enslavement of his people, and he was on
-his guard. The following communication written
-and sent to the Senate by the delegation which
-had visited President Johnson speaks for itself:</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“To the Honorable, the Senate of the United
-States:—The undersigned, being a delegation
-representing the colored people of the several states,
-and now sojourning in Washington, charged with
-the duty to look after the best interests of the recently
-emancipated, would most respectfully, but
-earnestly, pray your honorable body to favor no
-amendment of the Constitution of the United States
-which will grant any one or all of the states of this
-Union to disfranchise any class of citizens on the
-ground of race or color, for any consideration whatever.
-They would further respectfully represent
-that the Constitution as adopted by the Fathers of
-this Republic in 1789 evidently contemplated the
-result which has now happened, to wit, the abolition
-of slavery. The men who framed it, and those who
-adopted it, framed and adopted it for the people,
-and the whole people, colored men being at the time
-legal voters in most of the states. In that instrument
-as it now stands, there is not a sentence or a
-syllable conveying any shadow of right or authority
-by which any State may make color or race a disqualification
-for the exercise of the right of suffrage,
-and the undersigned will regard as a real calamity
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_265'>265</span>the introduction of any words expressly or by implication,
-giving any state or states such power; and
-we respectfully submit that if the amendment now
-pending before your honorable body shall be
-adopted, it will enable any state to deprive any class
-of citizens of the elective franchise, notwithstanding
-it was obviously framed with a view to affect
-the question of Negro suffrage only.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“For these and other reasons the undersigned respectfully
-pray that the amendment to the Constitution
-recently passed by the House and now before
-your body, be not adopted. And as in duty
-bound,” etc.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In addition to this letter addressed to the United
-States Senate, Mr. Douglass and his associates saw
-and argued the matter with every member of that
-body who would grant them an audience. The
-“Option Measure” was defeated and to a considerable
-extent through Mr. Douglass’s influence. By
-this time the question of Negro suffrage had become
-a leading issue. For the purpose of obtaining the
-sense of the country on this subject, there was
-arranged what was known at the time as the
-“National Loyalists’ Convention,” to be held at
-Philadelphia in September, 1866. It was made up
-of delegates from all parts of the Union, including
-many influential men in and out of public life.
-Rochester elected Mr. Douglass as its sole representative,
-which was a great tribute to him, giving
-new recognition to the Negro race. The entire
-country was quick to take notice of the city’s action,
-in so important a gathering, and there was not only
-objection but open opposition to Mr. Douglass’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_266'>266</span>taking a seat in the convention. Some of the leading
-delegates united in an effort to persuade him
-not to go.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Speaking of the situation, Mr. Douglass says that
-at Harrisburg, there was attached to his train cars
-loaded with representatives from some of the western
-states.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“When my presence became known to these
-gentlemen,” he continues, “a consultation was
-immediately held among them upon the question
-of what was best to be done with me. It seems
-strange, in view of all the progress which had been
-made, that such a question should arise. But the
-circumstances of the times made me the Jonah of
-the Republican ship, and responsible for the contrary
-winds and misbehaving weather. I was duly
-waited upon by a committee of my brother delegates
-to represent to me the undesirableness of my attendance
-upon the National Loyalists’ Convention. The
-spokesman of these sub-delegates was a gentleman
-from New Orleans.... He began by telling
-me that he knew my history and my works and that
-he entertained no very slight degree of respect for
-me; that both himself and the gentlemen who sent
-him, as well as those who accompanied him, regarded
-me with admiration; that there was not
-among them the remotest objection to sitting in the
-convention with me, but their personal wishes in
-the matter they felt should be set aside for the sake
-of our common cause; that whether I should or
-should not go in the convention was purely a matter
-of expediency; that I must know that there was a
-very strong and bitter prejudice against my race in
-the North as well as in the South and that the cry
-of social and political equality would not fail to be
-raised against the Republican party if I should
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_267'>267</span>attend this loyal National convention....
-I listened very attentively to the address, uttering
-no word during its delivery; but when it was finished,
-I said to the speaker and the committee, with
-all the emphasis I could throw into my voice and
-manner, ‘Gentlemen, with all respect, you might as
-well ask me to put a loaded pistol to my head and
-blow my brains out, as to ask me to keep out of this
-convention to which I have been duly elected.
-Then, gentlemen, what would you gain by the exclusion?
-Would not the charge of cowardice, certain
-to be brought against you, prove more damaging
-than that of amalgamation; would you not be
-branded all over the land as dastardly hypocrites,
-professing principles which you have no wish or intention
-of carrying out? As a matter of policy or
-expediency, you will be wise to let me in. Everybody
-knows that I have been duly elected as a delegate
-by the city of Rochester. This fact has been
-broadly announced and commented upon all over
-the country. If I am not admitted, the public will
-ask, “Where is Douglass? Why is he not seen in
-the convention?” and you would find that inquiry
-more difficult to answer than any charge brought
-against you for favoring political or social equality;
-but ignoring the question of policy altogether and
-looking at it as one of right and wrong, I am bound
-to go into that convention; not to do so would be to
-contradict the principles and practice of my life.’”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The delegates withdrew from the car in which
-Mr. Douglass was riding without accomplishing
-their purpose. It was soon made evident to him
-that his argument had not changed the prejudices
-of his visitors. When he reached Philadelphia and
-learned of the plans of the convention, he easily detected
-a concerted scheme to ignore him altogether.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_268'>268</span>“I was,” he says, “the ugly and deformed child of
-the family and to be kept out of sight as much as
-possible, while there was company in the house.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>It had been arranged that the delegates should
-assemble at Independence Hall and from there
-march in a body through the streets to the building
-where the convention was to be held. Mr. Douglass
-was present at Independence Hall at the appointed
-time, but he at once realized the situation. Only a few
-of the delegates, like General B. F. Butler, had the
-courage even to greet him. He was not only
-snubbed generally, but it was hinted to him that if
-he attempted to walk in the procession through the
-streets of a city where but a few years ago Negroes
-had been assaulted and their houses and schools
-burned down, he would be jeered at, insulted, and
-perhaps mobbed. It required no little courage to
-act in the face of these conditions, but Douglass
-never wavered. He was strong enough not to falter
-even at the desertion of men whom he had a right
-to regard as his friends.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>When the procession was formed, the delegates
-were to march two abreast. By this arrangement,
-the man who would have the hardihood to walk beside
-the only Negro in line would be an easy mark
-for scorn and contempt if not bodily attack. It was
-believed that no white man, under these conditions,
-would dare to march with Douglass. One delegate
-after another, those who had formerly taken counsel
-with him, passed him by. But to use his own words:
-“There was one man present who was broad enough
-to take in the whole situation and brave enough to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_269'>269</span>meet the duty of the hour; one who was neither
-afraid nor ashamed to own me as a man and a
-brother. One man of the purest Caucasian type, a
-poet, a scholar, brilliant as a writer, eloquent as a
-speaker, and holding a high influential position, the
-editor of a weekly journal having the largest circulation
-of any weekly paper in the state of New York,
-and that man was Theodore Tilton. He came to me
-in my isolation, seized me by the hand in a most
-brotherly way, and proposed to walk with me in the
-procession.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The delegates marching through the streets of
-Philadelphia met with a great ovation, and Mr.
-Douglass was singled out for special marks of favor.
-Along the entire way he was loudly cheered, applauded,
-and congratulated by the multitude. Those
-who had misjudged the sentiments of the Philadelphians
-were ashamed of themselves when they saw
-that he was apparently the most popular man in the
-procession.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>A very pleasing incident occurred on the line of
-march that day which served to call special attention
-to him. As his eyes caught a glimpse of
-a beautiful young woman among the spectators, he
-was seen suddenly to leave his place and fervently
-greet her. She was a member of the Auld family,
-and Mr. Douglass, recognizing her at once, paid her
-homage publicly. It appears that she had come
-to Philadelphia from her home in Baltimore
-when she heard that the ex-slave was to be there
-and walk in the procession as one of the great
-men of the occasion, and had been following the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_270'>270</span>line for over an hour with the hope of catching a
-view of the man who, but for his desire for freedom,
-might still have been a servant in her family.
-The newspapers made much of the incident, and
-described it as one of the most dramatic features of
-the day.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>By the time the marchers had reached the hall,
-the fear of Mr. Douglass’s presence, as a delegate,
-had given way to a feeling of respect, pride, and
-comradeship. He threw off all restraint, and went
-in to win from this body a resolution in favor of the
-franchise for his people. He delivered one of those
-powerful and convincing addresses that he was well
-able to make when aroused. As a result, he quite
-captured and controlled the sentiment of the convention
-in favor of his resolution, and when it adjourned
-Mr. Douglass was congratulated for having
-achieved a personal triumph that was remarkable
-for its completeness.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>After the adoption of the Thirteenth, Fourteenth,
-and Fifteenth Amendments, there was some curious
-speculation as to what place Frederick Douglass
-would take in this larger world of citizenship that
-he had helped to create. A number of his friends
-and admirers thought that he had led his people so
-successfully out of the wilderness of slavery that he
-should now put himself into a position where he
-could guide them further in the proper use of their
-rights and privileges as citizens of the republic.
-Many urged that the South was the right place for
-one of his power and standing. No colored man
-in this country had such training for large responsibilities
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_271'>271</span>as Mr. Douglass had had, during the previous
-thirty years of service. It was also feared
-that, without such leadership as he could bring to
-the South, small men, of mere political training and
-of partisan methods and ambitions, would assume
-the direction of the newly-made citizens, and, by
-their selfishness and greed, bring down upon these
-poor people more miseries than could be cured in
-many generations. Everything seemed to invite
-Frederick Douglass to these new duties and new responsibilities.
-It was pointed out to him how easily
-he could become a pioneer by being elected to the
-House of Representatives, or even to the Senate,
-from some of the reconstructed states of the South.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>He thought long and seriously over the project,
-but finally concluded not to change his habitation
-for the sake of gaining political power. He expressed
-his conclusions on the matter as follows:</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“That I did not yield to this temptation was
-not entirely due to my age, but the idea did not entirely
-square well with my better judgment and
-sense of propriety. The thought of going to live
-among a people in order to gain their votes and acquire
-official honors was repugnant to my sense of
-self-respect, and I had not lived long enough in the
-political atmosphere of Washington to have this
-feeling blunted so as to make me indifferent to its
-suggestions.... I had small faith in my aptitude
-as a politician, and could not hope to cope
-with rival aspirants. My life and labors in the
-North had in a measure unfitted me for such
-work, and I could not have readily adapted myself
-to that peculiar oratory found to be most effective
-with the newly enfranchised class. Upon the whole,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_272'>272</span>I have never regretted that I did not enter the arena
-of Congressional honors to which I was invited.
-Outside of mere personal considerations, I saw, or
-thought I saw, that, in the nature of the case, the
-sceptre of power had passed from the old slave-states
-to the free and loyal states, and that hereafter,
-at least for some time to come, the loyal North,
-with its advanced civilization, must dictate the policy
-and control the destiny of the republic. I had
-an audience ready made in the free-states, one
-which the labors of thirty years had prepared for
-me, and before this audience the freedmen needed
-an advocate as much as they needed a member in
-Congress. I think that in this I was right, for thus
-far our colored members in Congress have not largely
-made themselves felt in the legislation of this country,
-and I have little reason to think that I could
-have done better than they.”</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_273'>273</span>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER XIV<br> <span class='large'>SHARING THE RESPONSIBILITIES AND HONORS OF FREEDOM</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c003'>The course of events in the succeeding thirty
-years proved that Frederick Douglass was wholly
-right in his determination not to take up his residence
-in one of the Southern states for political purposes.
-Had he followed the advice of some of his
-friends, his career would have been considerably
-marred by the exigencies of party and sectional
-politics, and his character as a natural leader of his
-people would, in all probability, have shrunken to
-that of a state politician. He did the wise thing,
-however, in changing his residence from Rochester
-to Washington. This brought him in closer touch
-with his people, as well as near to the law-making
-forces of the nation.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>After he became settled in his new home, he soon
-found his heart and hands full of occupations that
-tried his soul. He was fairly overwhelmed with all
-kinds of schemes and propositions that were carried
-to him, urging him to do this or that for the protection
-and elevation of the race. It required a
-mind of more than ordinary shrewdness to discriminate
-between the practical and impractical. Many
-of the Negroes seemed to think him capable of performing
-miracles in the way of undoing the effects
-of slavery. It required a stout spirit to listen unmoved
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_274'>274</span>to the wail that came from the hearts of his
-sadly distracted people. Those of us who are living
-forty years after the close of the war, can little
-appreciate to what an extent the glory of emancipation
-was shadowed by the miseries of a whole race
-suddenly set free with no preparation for freedom.
-When one studies the history of the years that followed
-emancipation, and learns of the many sins
-and errors of the time, and the retribution that
-they brought upon the bewildered people in whose
-name they were committed, it must seem strange
-that the Negro race could survive and make the
-progress it has made. Through all the confusion
-and clamor of wants, sorrows, sufferings and disappointments,
-Mr. Douglass kept his head, and was
-at all times philosophical, certain that the good accomplished
-was more important than the seeming
-failures; that the hindrances to progress were transitory,
-the forces of progress permanent. After
-he had settled in Washington, two things at once
-engaged his attention: the publication of another
-paper, <cite>The New National Era</cite>, and the Freedmen’s
-Bank.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>There was apparently a pressing need for a
-national organ to advance the cause of the Negro,
-and it was believed that the name of Frederick
-Douglass at its head would surely bring it a wide
-circulation, as well as a commanding influence. He
-took hold of the project with characteristic vigor
-and invested a large amount of his savings in the
-venture. With the assistance of his two sons, both
-practical printers, the paper proved to be one of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_275'>275</span>greatest helps of the hour. Some of Mr. Douglass’s
-best utterances are to be found in the <cite>New Era</cite>. Its
-columns were open to the leading colored men and
-women of that time and it exerted a wide and salutary
-influence. However, it failed of support. The
-enterprise cost Mr. Douglass between nine and
-ten thousand dollars. He seems to have anticipated
-its financial misfortunes, but said of it afterward:
-“The journal was valuable, while it lasted,
-and the experiment was to me full of instruction
-which has to some extent been heeded, for I have
-kept well out of newspaper undertakings since, so I
-have no tears to shed.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>When Mr. Douglass went to Washington, he found
-established there the Freedmen’s Bank. It was
-chartered by Congress and was run and managed in
-connection with the Freedmen’s Bureau. “It was,”
-as Mr. Douglass says, “more than a bank. There
-was something missionary in its composition.” Its
-managers were men of character and religion, and
-were interested in everything that could point the
-way of true living to the ex-slave. To teach the
-important lesson of thrift was its main object.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>For a time this bank flourished very well.
-Branches were established in various parts of the
-South. The poor freedmen in the bottom lands of
-Mississippi and other isolated places quickly learned
-the use and meaning of the institution; and eagerly
-and gratefully committed to its keeping their small
-earnings. Thousands of these depositors first came
-to know and realize their relationship to the government
-at Washington through it. The owners
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_276'>276</span>of United States bonds did not feel more secure
-than did these trusting new citizens of the republic.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The bank and its purposes appealed to Mr.
-Douglass. He felt it his duty to do anything in his
-power to help the benevolent enterprise. It was
-not long before he was elected one of its trustees.
-He accepted the post and, as an earnest of his interest
-and confidence in it, placed several thousand
-dollars in its keeping. He says: “It seemed fitting
-to cast in my lot with my brother freedmen and
-help build up an institution which represented the
-thrift and economy of my people to so striking an
-advantage, for the more millions accumulated
-there, I thought, the more consideration and respect
-would be shown to the colored people by the
-whole country.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>At first he was not active in his new office. He
-seldom attended the board meetings. The men in
-charge were of so high a character and had brought
-the bank up to such rank that his faith in it
-was well-nigh absolute. He was surprised when
-soon notified that he had been elected president.
-Before assuming this post, in 1871, he asked for a
-statement of the bank’s affairs, not because he was
-suspicious, but that he might the more intelligently
-take hold of his new duties. He received assurances
-from the officers that everything was in excellent
-condition but he at once began a wholesale
-policy of retrenchment in the expenses of management.
-From the showing made by those in a position
-to know and to be believed, Mr. Douglass felt
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_277'>277</span>so confident that everything was as it appeared to
-be that he loaned the bank $10,000 of his own
-money, until it could realize on a part of its securities.
-Soon afterward several things connected
-with the bank’s management excited his distrust.
-The money loaned by him was not repaid so
-promptly as it should have been; some of the
-trustees had removed their own deposits and opened
-accounts with other banks; and the new president
-discovered that through dishonest agents, heavy
-losses were sustained in the South; that there was a
-discrepancy in the accounts amounting to about
-$40,000; that the “reserve” which the bank by its
-charter was obliged to maintain was entirely exhausted.
-All this Mr. Douglass learned after he
-had been president for only three months. Being
-convinced that things were rapidly going from
-bad to worse, he immediately reported the condition
-of the bank to the Finance Committee of
-the United States Senate. The trustees upon whose
-figures and reports Mr. Douglass relied for his
-action, now tried to retract their statements and did
-their utmost to stay the hand of the government,
-but the Senate committee accepted his representations
-and immediately proceeded to bring the bank
-to the end of its remarkable career.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Mr. Douglass did not take advantage of his private
-knowledge of its insolvency to remove his $2,000
-on deposit, as some trustees had done. In this,
-as in other things, he acted with perfect openness
-and absolute honesty. Nevertheless the bank’s
-troubles brought to him no end of bitter criticism.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_278'>278</span>The number of open accounts at the time of failure
-was over 60,000 and the total amount deposited
-during the period of its existence was about $57,000,000.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Bad management may truthfully be written on
-the face of this greatest single setback to the Negro’s
-progress. Viewed in the light of the condition of
-these people, striving by might and main to promote
-their own interests, the failure of the Freedmen’s
-Bank was little less than a crime. The mischief
-had all been done before Mr. Douglass took
-charge of the institution. As he says: “Not a
-dollar of its millions was loaned by me or with my
-approval. The fact is, and all investigation will
-show, that I was married to a corpse. When I became
-connected with the bank I had a tolerably fair
-name for honest dealing. I had expended in the
-publication of my paper in Rochester thousands of
-dollars annually and had often to depend upon my
-credit to bridge over immediate wants. But no
-man here or elsewhere can say that I ever wronged
-him out of one cent.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>This miserable failure distressed Mr. Douglass
-more than any other man in the country, because
-he saw how wide-spread would be the loss of confidence
-in him and in his people. The mere fact
-that his own conscience was clear and that his
-prompt action prevented further losses did not
-soften his disappointment. On the contrary, the
-subject continued to be a source of public bitterness
-and suspicion for many years, but he was large
-enough to grow out of and beyond any evil effects
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_279'>279</span>arising from it, so far as his own standing and reputation
-were concerned.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Important as was the Freedmen’s Bank, both as
-a success and as a failure, it was but a small part
-of the many evidences that the black race was
-everywhere awake to the fact that it was living in
-a new era. The transformation of the Negro’s status
-from that of a quasi-denizen to that of a full-fledged
-citizen of America was a revolution of far-reaching
-import, but it was accompanied by little demonstration.
-The only proof that a great change had been
-brought about was the eagerness with which the
-colored people attempted to realize all the benefits
-belonging to full citizenship. Up to this time, of
-course, they had never had any part in politics, but
-it did not take them long to learn the game. Educated
-Negroes and those who had but little education,
-very quickly mastered its tricks and made the
-most of their opportunities. In every Southern
-state colored men were easily elected to the state
-legislatures and to other high offices.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In Louisiana, Oscar J. Dunn, P. B. S. Pinchback,
-and C. C. Antoine; in South Carolina, Alonzo J.
-Ransier and Robert H. Gleaves; and in Mississippi,
-Alexander Davis, were elected Lieutenant-Governors.
-Colored men were also chosen for important
-county and town offices;—there were Negro
-sheriffs, county clerks, justices of the peace. To
-this period also belongs the election of the only two
-colored men ever given seats in the United States
-Senate, Hiram R. Revels and Blanche K. Bruce, of
-Mississippi. In the lower house of Congress, nearly
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_280'>280</span>every state in the South was represented by Negroes.
-In addition to these elective offices of honor and
-distinction, a large number of the leaders of the
-race held appointive Federal offices, as postmasters,
-and as collectors of customs and internal revenue,
-and for the first time in the history of the
-United States, colored men were appointed to diplomatic
-positions.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In recent years, students and writers of the Reconstruction
-period, have indulged in a good deal
-of unmerited abuse of the colored men who, for a
-brief season, and without previous training, under
-the leadership of white politicians, held political
-posts. It is a deplorable fact that too many inferior
-persons were elected to fill important state and
-county offices in the reconstructed states. It is quite
-true that the colored citizen voted for unfit men of his
-own race because there was no one else to vote for.
-This same freedman would more willingly have
-used his franchise for a white man of character and
-ability, if he had had the opportunity. The fact
-is that democracy does not stand still for want
-of fit men, whether in the Bowery district in New
-York or in the Black Belt of South Carolina. The
-Negroes who were elected to Congress, however,
-were, with but few exceptions, men of character
-and superior intelligence. B. K. Bruce of Mississippi,
-John R. Lynch, Robert Brown Elliot, A. J.
-Ransier, and Robert Smalls were highly creditable
-representatives of a race that had just emerged from
-the night of slavery. In fact, it is surprising that
-there were any colored men in the South who had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_281'>281</span>enough spirit and intelligence even to aspire to the
-things that but yesterday were beyond their reach.
-It is also worthy of note that among the Negroes
-holding positions of dignity and trust, there were
-only a few cases in which that trust was knowingly
-betrayed.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The eagerness with which colored men, of any
-ability at all, sought public posts was largely due
-to the fact that there were few places open to honorable
-ambitions, outside of public office, to which
-they could aspire. Not many at that time had
-any training for school-teaching or the professions.
-Politics was the one door that opened most widely
-to Negroes of ability. The people at large seemed
-to enjoy the novelty of seeing these new citizens of
-the country so quickly take their places in the
-civil service of the government, and wear whatever
-honors they could win. The same sentiment that
-forced the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments
-into the Constitution of the United States, was
-gratified when educated and eloquent ex-slaves took
-their seats in both branches of Congress.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>While it lasted, this was all very pleasing, hopeful,
-and interesting, but a reaction was bound to
-come. The constituency behind these representative
-leaders lacked the necessary intelligence, knowledge,
-and business experience. By such an electorate
-men may be chosen to power, but they cannot
-long be held in power.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>It was an unfortunate thing, too, that the freedmen
-learned their first lessons in politics when public
-morals were at so low an ebb. Many sins were
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_282'>282</span>committed and tolerated in the interest of party
-success. Many desperate men in a spirit at once
-predatory and partisan, invaded the South and attempted
-to instruct the colored people in ways that
-were dark, but ways that led to party victory.
-These men were bad models for a learning race to
-follow. Although it was unreasonable to expect
-these newly emancipated people to be superior to
-their white leaders, yet, by recent writers, they have
-been held accountable for whatever sins were committed
-in this office-holding era.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Mr. Douglass, in the midst of the political prosperity
-of his race, was not misled as to the outcome.
-No one saw more clearly than he the uncertainty
-of the position to which it had been elevated
-by recent events. While it is true he was at no
-time a political power in the South, the colored men
-who came into office looked to him for counsel and
-advice. He rejoiced in the many evidences of personal
-worth and talent displayed by Negroes who,
-for the first time in American history, were having
-some real part in the government of the country.
-Yet experience made him feel and declare that,
-after all, “the true basis of rights is the capacity of
-the individual.” He urgently pleaded that the
-government should give the freedman education
-that he might have knowledge to use his suffrage in
-such a manner as to preserve his own liberty, and
-contribute to the public welfare.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Mr. Douglass enjoyed a full share of the honors
-and responsibilities of office-holding. In each succeeding
-administration after the war, posts and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_283'>283</span>places came to him almost as a matter of course, because
-of his prominence as a representative of the enfranchised
-race. During the administration of President
-Grant, he was appointed one of the councilmen
-of the District of Columbia, and afterward was
-elected a member of the legislature of the District.
-He soon resigned the last position to accept the
-secretaryship of the commission appointed by
-Grant to visit San Domingo for the purpose of
-negotiating a treaty for the annexation of that
-island to the United States. The commission
-was composed of Senator B. F. Wade, Dr. S. G.
-Howe, and Andrew D. White, President of Cornell
-University. The country was somewhat startled by
-the innovation of placing a colored man in a position
-to represent the government on so important a
-mission. Its purpose failed. Opposition on the part
-of Senator Sumner and other influential Republicans
-was of the most bitter and uncompromising sort.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The political feud that arose from General Grant’s
-San Domingan policy carried many men out of the
-Republican party. Mr. Douglass was placed in an
-awkward position in accepting the appointment,
-because his great friend, Senator Sumner, was the
-leader of the opposition to the President’s plan of
-annexation. He admired and was personally attached
-to both because of their heroic services in the
-cause of freedom and citizenship for his people.
-Explaining his attitude, he said: “I am free to say
-that, had I been guided only by the promptings of
-my heart, I should, in this controversy, have followed
-Charles Sumner. He was not only the most
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_284'>284</span>clear-sighted, brave, and uncompromising friend of
-my race who had ever stood upon the floor of the
-Senate, but he was to me a loved, honored, and
-precious personal friend.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>After Senator Sumner had arraigned President
-Grant in a notable speech in the Senate, Mr. Douglass
-happened to be a caller at the White House and
-was asked by the President what he now thought of
-his friend from Massachusetts. True to his feelings,
-Douglass frankly replied that, in his opinion,
-the Senator was sincere in his position, believing
-that in opposing annexation he defended the cause
-of the colored race, as he had always done. “I saw
-that my reply was not satisfactory,” Douglass observes,
-“and I said, ‘What do you think, Mr.
-President, of Senator Sumner?’ He replied with
-some feeling, ‘I think he is mad.’”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>By his perfect frankness, Mr. Douglass was able
-to retain the respect and confidence of both men.
-He agreed with President Grant in his annexation
-policy and had, at the same time, a special fondness
-for the Massachusetts Senator. He frequently dined
-with the latter and they were often seen walking arm
-in arm in the corridors of the Capitol, while Douglass
-embraced every opportunity to sound the
-praises of his friend. In an address delivered at
-New Orleans before a convention of colored men,
-during this Grant-Sumner feud, he said: “There is
-now at Washington a man who represents the future
-and is a majority in himself,—a man at whose feet
-Grant learns wisdom. That man is Charles Sumner.
-I know them both; they are great men, but Sumner
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_285'>285</span>is as steady as the north star; he is no flickering
-light. For twenty-five years he has worked for the
-Republican party and I hope I may cease forever,
-if I cease to give all honor to Charles Sumner.”
-And later he said: “As a man of integrity and
-truth, Charles Sumner was high above suspicion,
-and not all the Grants in Christendom will rob him
-of his well-earned character.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Notwithstanding his repeatedly declared loyalty
-to the Senator, Mr. Douglass was found in the ranks
-doing valiant service for the reëlection of General
-Grant for a second term. His coöperation was
-needed in some quarters, because the colored voters
-were not a little confused when such stalwart friends as
-Sumner, Senator Trumbull, of Illinois; Carl Schurz,
-of Missouri; and Horace Greeley, of New York,
-were found in the “camp of the enemy,” fighting
-the Republican party. The National Convention of
-Colored Men, held in New Orleans in April, 1872,
-affords an interesting example of how puzzling was
-the split in the Republican organization to the
-average Negro voter. This was a very large and
-representative body. The members were in a state
-of grave apprehension, on account of the division in
-the ranks of the black man’s party. Many of the
-leading delegates in attendance were uncertain to
-whom their allegiance should be given. It was
-difficult for a colored man in those days not to be
-with Sumner, right or wrong.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>It was here that Mr. Douglass demonstrated his
-power as a political leader. His speech as president
-of the convention was a notable effort. It was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_286'>286</span>telegraphed in full to the New York <cite>Herald</cite>, and
-throughout the country it was widely circulated and
-read, as a campaign document. It did more than
-any other one thing to hold the colored people in
-party lines. In addition to this, Douglass took an
-active part in the ensuing struggle, and no orator in
-the Grant-Greeley contest was more popular than he.
-To the black voter, who wanted to follow the Liberal
-Republicans led by Senator Sumner, he urged
-that there was “no path out of the Republican
-party that did not lead directly into the camp of
-the Democratic party—away from our friends, directly
-to our enemies.” It was in this campaign,
-too, that he made use of the well-known party aphorism,
-“The Republican party is the ship, and all
-else is the sea.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>What was more important and interesting than
-any other thing in this contest, so far as Mr. Douglass
-was concerned, was the singular recognition
-shown him by the Republicans of New York, who
-placed his name on the ticket as one of the electors
-of that state. No other colored man in the history
-of the country had ever been so honored. When
-the electoral college met in Albany, he was commissioned
-to carry the New York vote to the capital of
-the nation.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Though he had done valiant service for the reëlection
-of General Grant, Mr. Douglass neither
-asked nor received any reward in the form of an
-office. At that time there were but few honors in
-the gift of the President that could be considered
-within the reach of a colored man. The one diplomatic
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_287'>287</span>post which he could have obtained for the
-asking—as minister to Hayti—he made no effort to
-get, but generously supported his friend E. D. Bassett,
-of Philadelphia, for it. Mr. Bassett was a man
-of fine attainments and exceptionally well qualified
-for the office. This act of deference to the claims
-of others was characteristic of Mr. Douglass in all
-of his relationships to the prominent Negroes of his
-generation.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In 1877, and after the election and inauguration
-of President Hayes, the whole country was more or
-less startled by the announcement that Frederick
-Douglass had been appointed Marshal of the District
-of Columbia. This office was one of much political
-and social responsibility, and the appointment
-of an ex-slave produced a sensation in
-Washington. As Mr. Douglass says, “It came
-upon the people of the District as a great surprise
-and almost a punishment, and provoked something
-like a scream, I will not say a yell, of popular displeasure.”
-This was not an exaggerated statement
-of the public feeling directed against the appointment.
-Plans were set on foot to secure the defeat
-of his nomination in the United States Senate. It
-seemed impossible for the people at the capital to
-view the President’s action in any other way than
-as the degradation of an exalted office. They were
-sure that Mr. Douglass would use his place to “Africanize
-the District courts”; and the great social
-functions of the White House, with a Negro as
-“Lord High Chamberlain,” would become the
-laughing-stock of the enlightened world.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_288'>288</span>If Mr. Douglass had been a man of less tact and
-intelligence, and had not occupied so high a place
-in popular esteem, he could not have withstood the
-strength and bitterness of the opposition. His
-good standing, in spite of his color, saved him and
-the Hayes administration from a humiliating surrender
-to popular prejudice. When his name
-reached the Senate, it was confirmed without serious
-discussion. Senator Conkling had charge of the
-matter, and swept away all opposition in a perfect
-storm of eloquent ridicule of the reasons presented
-for rejection. Unfortunately, the Senate’s action
-did not wholly end the agitation. Every word and
-act of Mr. Douglass’s was scrutinized for some proof
-of his unfitness. Shortly after the confirmation of his
-appointment, he delivered an address in the city of
-Baltimore, taking as his theme “Our National Capital.”
-It was an interesting mixture of praise and
-criticism, though in no way the result of recent occurrences,
-for he had delivered the same speech in
-Washington some months before and it provoked
-no discussion. He was, therefore, greatly surprised
-to find, when he returned to the capital, that the old
-animosity which had spent itself in attempting to
-defeat his appointment, was again aroused. The
-objectionable portions of his Baltimore lecture were
-quoted and commented upon in terms of unqualified
-bitterness. An effort was made to induce the sureties
-on his bond to withdraw, and in this way disqualify
-him to act in his official capacity. Strong
-pressure was brought to bear on the President to
-relieve the capital of the nation of the insufferable
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_289'>289</span>offense of an official who had so little sense of the
-proprieties as to hold up Washington and its citizens
-to public ridicule. All this, however, proved
-to be of no effect. His bondsmen, one of whom
-was a wealthy and prominent Democrat of the District,
-could not be persuaded to embarrass the Negro
-marshal by withdrawing their names. Hayes was
-likewise firm in resisting all efforts to remove Mr.
-Douglass, who refers gratefully to the President as
-follows: “When all Washington was in an uproar,
-and a wild clamor rent the air for my removal from
-the office of marshal, on account of the lecture delivered
-by me in Baltimore, and when petitions
-were flowing in upon him demanding my degradation,
-he nobly rebuked the mad spirit of persecution
-by openly declaring his purpose to retain me
-in my place.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Douglass’s successful fight in retaining his position
-of honor was interesting, not so much because
-of his personal standing, as because it was typical
-of the whole struggle of his race, since emancipation,
-to win their way into the confidences of the
-American people by proving themselves capable of
-using their liberty and their citizenship in a proper
-manner.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>If Mr. Douglass had been sacrificed to the demands
-of popular prejudice, it would have served
-as a disqualifying precedent in the matter of future
-opportunities of colored men with honorable ambitions.
-In a short while, all opposition was quieted,
-and the new marshal pursued the routine of his duties
-without hindrance or serious embarrassment.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_290'>290</span>The judges and attorneys of the District soon learned
-to treat the Negro official with respect and courtesy.
-None of the awful things predicted came to pass,
-and the powers that stood behind him and were responsible
-for him were wholly vindicated.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>During the trying ordeal from which he had so
-successfully emerged, Mr. Douglass complained
-somewhat petulantly that “no colored man in the
-city uttered one public word in defense or extenuation
-of me or my Baltimore speech, except Dr.
-Charles B. Purvis.” He was always sensitive to
-the least evidence of opposition or slight on the part
-of his own people. For a man who had done so
-much for his race at a time when it was unable to
-do anything for itself, it was, perhaps, quite natural
-for him to feel as he did, now that so many voices
-were lifted against him. Whatever hostility or
-indifference the colored people in the District exhibited
-toward Mr. Douglass, was probably due to
-jealousy of his leadership and a professed chagrin
-on account of the alleged willingness on his part to
-accept the office with the abridgment of the social
-privileges enjoyed by previous marshals.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>His answer to these complaints was such as to
-satisfy any reasonable person that it meant no surrender
-of principle. All the functions that legally
-belonged to his office he performed. The ornamental
-duties that had grown up by custom and usage,
-he willingly left to others. He had enjoyed more
-social opportunities than any colored man in the
-country and he possessed infinite tact and a fine
-sense of discrimination as to rights and privileges.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_291'>291</span>Frequently while he was marshal, he was called
-upon to introduce distinguished strangers to the
-President. He said: “I was ever a welcome visitor
-at the Executive Mansion on state occasions and
-on all others while Rutherford B. Hayes was President
-of the United States.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>As time passed, his own people, as well as other
-men in Washington, came to admire Douglass’s
-good sense as well as his fine bearing on all occasions.
-The proudest event in his official life was
-associated with the inauguration of General James
-A. Garfield as President of the United States. The
-Marshal of the District of Columbia was called upon
-to act an important part in the greatest of all
-national ceremonies. He was brought into touch
-with the retiring as well as the incoming President.
-He had the honor of escorting them both from the
-chamber of the United States Senate to the east front
-of the Capitol where the oath of office was to be
-taken by President Garfield and where he delivered
-his inaugural address to a vast concourse of people.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In speaking of that experience, Douglass says
-with pardonable pride:</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“I felt myself standing on new ground, on a
-height never before trodden by any of my people,
-one heretofore occupied only by members of the
-Caucasian race.... I deemed the event highly
-important as a new circumstance in my career, as a
-new recognition of my class, and as a new step in
-the progress of the nation. Personally, it was a
-striking contrast to my early condition. Yonder I
-was an unlettered slave, toiling under the ‘Negro
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_292'>292</span>breaker’; here I was the United States Marshal of
-the capital of the nation, having under my care and
-guidance the sacred persons of an ex-President and
-the President-elect of a nation of sixty millions of
-people, and was armed with a nation’s power to
-arrest any arm raised against them. While I was
-not insensible or indifferent to the fact that I was
-treading the high places of the land, I was not conscious
-of any unsteadiness of head or heart. I was
-a United States Marshal by accident. I was no less
-Frederick Douglass, identified with a proscribed
-class, whose perfect and practical equality with
-other American citizens, was yet far down the steps
-of time. Yet I was not sorry to have this brief
-authority for I rejoiced in the fact that a colored
-man could occupy this height and that the precedent
-was valuable.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Thus it was that Mr. Douglass esteemed every
-honor or favor earned and received by him, to
-mean some fresh recognition of the worth of
-the Negro race. He sustained a very close and
-cordial relationship to Mr. Garfield. He had done
-effective service in the campaign that resulted in
-the election of the new President, whose fine abilities
-and robust Americanism he greatly admired.
-Shortly after the inauguration, Mr. Douglass was
-summoned to the White House. Garfield wished
-to discuss with this acknowledged leader of the
-Negro race his policy in reference to appointments
-of colored men to office. He assured Mr. Douglass
-of his intention to place capable colored men in a
-higher grade of positions in the diplomatic service,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_293'>293</span>and he asked if, in Douglass’s opinion, nations composed
-of white people would object to receiving
-colored men as representatives of the American
-government. He also assured Douglass that Senator
-Conkling’s wish for his (Douglass’s) reappointment
-as Marshal of the District of Columbia would
-be granted with pleasure. The Negro leader found
-the position thoroughly congenial to him, and it
-was a matter of satisfaction to realize that he had
-so successfully lived down past objections that no
-one now raised a voice against him. But for reasons
-that were never divulged to him, he was displaced,
-and another was appointed to the post.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Though he was keenly disappointed and chagrined,
-Douglass believed in Mr. Garfield and was
-not inclined to censure him because of his broken
-promise. He had strong faith that the President
-was about to carry out a policy of recognition of the
-colored race which would be more liberal than that
-of any of his predecessors. He felt that the colored
-people at this time needed a firm friend. He
-clearly saw that his race in respect to its rights of
-citizenship was slipping back from the high position
-occupied by it ten years prior to this time. He
-feared that the reaction which began to set in after
-the withdrawal of Federal troops from the South in
-1876 would carry his people to something like
-political serfdom unless some strong hand would
-come to their aid.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The assurances now given to him by President
-Garfield that the Negro and his cause would receive
-fair and honest treatment relieved his anxiety despite
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_294'>294</span>his own displacement, and he confidently expected
-that the administration of General Garfield
-would mean much to Negro progress in all directions.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Alas for human hopes! Before the big-hearted
-man could put his good intentions into effect, the
-assassin had done his evil work. Mr. Douglass,
-like every one else close to the President, was overwhelmed
-with grief. He said: “Few men in this
-country felt more keenly than I the shock created
-by the assassination of President Garfield and few
-men had better reason for this feeling.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>When Vice-President Arthur succeeded to the
-presidency, Mr. Douglass was appointed Recorder of
-Deeds of the District of Columbia. This was a
-lucrative office and a good deal of patronage was
-attached to it. Being the first colored man to be
-appointed to the post, he had to face the opposition
-that usually attaches to an innovation; but the objections
-were not of a serious nature and soon subsided.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>He continued in this place for five years. When
-Mr. Cleveland came to the presidency he rather
-expected to be removed summarily; but the Democratic
-chief magistrate proved to be less of a party
-man than either the Recorder or the average Republican
-expected. The new President was too
-high-minded to be a mere partisan, and to Mr.
-Douglass’s surprise, he was treated with much respect
-and kindness. He and his wife were invited
-to all public functions given at the White House
-and Mr. Cleveland in every way showed that he
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_295'>295</span>shared the public esteem in which the great Negro
-was so universally held. He was allowed to occupy
-the position for quite a year under the Democratic
-administration. Then instead of removing or asking
-for his resignation in the usually abrupt way,
-the President graciously wrote to know when it
-would be convenient for him to give up the post.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Mr. Cleveland further indicated his kindly regard
-for the colored people of the country by promising
-them that his election would not mean a curtailment
-of their liberties, as some of them feared.
-For this assurance Mr. Douglass made public acknowledgment.
-The statements of the President
-were timely and quieting, because for the first time
-in twenty years, the more ignorant of the Negroes
-were somewhat panic-stricken. Speaking of their
-fears, Douglass testified “to the painful apprehension
-and distress felt by my people in the South
-from the return to power of the old Democratic and
-slavery party. To many of them, it seemed that
-they were left naked to their enemies, in fact, lost;
-that Mr. Cleveland’s election meant the revival of
-the slave-power and that they would now again be
-reduced to slavery and the lash. The misery
-brought to the South by this wide-spread alarm can
-hardly be described or measured. The wail of despair
-for a time from the late bondsmen was deep,
-bitter and heart-rending.... It was well for
-the poor people in this condition that Mr. Cleveland
-himself sent word South to allay their fear and remove
-their agony.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Mr. Douglass always cherished a very sincere admiration
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_296'>296</span>for President Cleveland, for this and other
-reasons, and regarded it as highly fortunate that a
-man so just and non-partisan should be elected as
-the first Democratic President after emancipation.
-As a result of his fair treatment, the American
-Negroes first learned that the term Democratic did
-not necessarily mean for them loss of rights and
-citizenship. In fact, his liberal policy caused a
-great many of the more intelligent colored men
-very seriously to consider the advisability of a
-division of the Negro vote between the two great
-parties. Men of the high standing of Archibald
-H. Grimké, of Boston, Mass., and W. M. E.
-Matthews, of New York, argued with great
-plausibility that one way to convince the American
-people of his qualifications for citizenship, would be
-for the Negro to learn to vote for principles rather
-than for party leaders. They insisted that to
-take the pith out of the Democratic opposition to
-his appearance in politics, a goodly portion of
-the voters should join themselves to that party.
-It was unfortunate that this tendency to political
-independence on the part of the enlightened colored
-men could not have been encouraged. However
-natural and human it may be for the Negro people
-to be allied wholly to one of two political parties,
-it is nevertheless a serious hindrance to the colored
-man’s political freedom that he must continue to regard
-the Republican party as composed wholly of
-his friends and the Democratic party as composed
-wholly of his enemies. Mr. Douglass openly confessed
-his inability to take this new stand in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_297'>297</span>politics, notwithstanding his admiration for Mr.
-Cleveland and his respect for the motives of the few
-colored men in the country who were independent
-enough to break away from party control. Though
-he personally could not join the movement he regarded
-it as a sign of progress for colored men of
-character and intellect to say that they cared more
-for their race than for party, and more for their
-country than for their race.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The last public office held by Mr. Douglass under
-the United States government was that of Minister
-Resident and Consul General to the Republic of
-Hayti. This seemed a fitting climax to the long
-list of honors that came to him, not so much as a
-reward of party service as for his own high deserving.
-The appointment was made by President
-Harrison and was wholly unsought. Douglass had,
-of course, and as usual, taken an active part in the
-campaign of 1888. The tariff was the main subject
-of contention and it was more than hinted to him
-that he was expected to make the most of this issue.
-He nevertheless had his own way, and everywhere
-he insisted that the paramount issue was the
-rights of men.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>On the stump he was as popular as ever; on all
-sides he found the people deeply interested in his
-fervent pleas for justice to his race. Speaking of
-his efforts in the last political campaign in which
-he took a prominent part, he said: “I held that
-the soul of the nation was in this question and that
-the gain of all the gold in the world would not compensate
-for the loss of the national soul. National
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_298'>298</span>honor is the soul of the nation and when this is lost
-all is lost.... As with an individual, so with
-a nation. There is a time when it may be properly
-asked, What does it profit a nation to gain the whole
-world and lose its own soul?”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In accepting the honor of representing this country
-in Hayti Frederick Douglass was about to
-realize a long cherished wish,—an opportunity to see
-and study the only republic established and carried
-on by black men in the Western world. In some
-respects his appointment at another time would
-have been more agreeable. Very much to his surprise
-and chagrin, and for causes of which he was
-wholly innocent, it was bitterly opposed. Antagonism
-to him came almost wholly from the East and
-was confined to interests that were bent upon obtaining
-valuable concessions from Hayti. Certain New
-York newspapers tried to make it appear that he
-was unfitted for the place, and insisted that the
-people wanted a white man to represent the United
-States, although every representative from this government
-to Hayti since 1869 had been a colored
-man. It was also urged that Douglass would not be
-well received, because at one time he favored the
-annexation of San Domingo.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Even after his appointment was confirmed by the
-United States Senate, the opposition still pursued
-him. For example, it was said that the captain of
-the ship designated by the government to convey
-the new minister to Port-au-Prince, refused to take
-him on board because of his complexion; that after
-he arrived at the capital of Hayti he was snubbed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_299'>299</span>by the officials for the same reason; and that it
-was found he had not been duly accredited.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In these statements there was scarcely a grain of
-truth. There was no insult to Mr. Douglass by the
-captain of the boat; there was no lack of cordiality
-and respect on the part of the Haytians on account
-of his color; and there was no embarrassment
-of any kind to warrant the peculiar and
-insistent opposition that followed him from the
-moment his appointment was announced. There
-were two issues of commanding interest at this time
-which made the position of our Minister to Port-au-Prince
-a trying one. First in importance was a desire
-on the part of the United States to secure by
-treaty, Môle St. Nicolas as a naval station; and,
-second, a desperate determination by the Clyde
-Steamship Company to obtain from the Haytian
-government a subsidy of a half-million dollars to
-ply a line of steamers between New York and
-Hayti.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>As an evidence of the mean spirit of Mr. Douglass’s
-enemies, he was grossly misrepresented as being
-the cause of the failure of the United States to
-obtain the Môle. The great perversion of the real
-facts surrounding the diplomatic efforts on the part
-of the government to procure from Hayti the use of
-this port, led Mr. Douglass to publish in the <cite>North
-American Review</cite> for September and October, 1891,
-a full history of his connection with the affair. In
-this interesting account of the negotiations carried
-on during his official residence in Hayti, it will be
-seen that he was in no way responsible for the result.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_300'>300</span>In the first place, he was not vested with
-authority to arrange with Hayti for a United
-States naval station. He had been there as a representative
-of this government over one year before
-the matter was taken up. When the United States
-got ready to negotiate a treaty, the subject was entrusted
-wholly to a special agent in the person of
-Rear-Admiral Gherardi. Mr. Douglass’s only instructions
-were to coöperate with and assist the
-Admiral in every possible way. The news of the
-appointment of a special commissioner by the
-United States government was viewed by Mr.
-Douglass as “sudden and far from flattering.” It
-placed him in an unenviable light, both before the
-community of Port-au-Prince and the government
-of Hayti, and made his position very humble,
-secondary, and subordinate. He said: “The situation
-suggested the resignation of my office as due to
-my honor, but reflection soon convinced me that
-such a course would subject me to misconstruction
-more hurtful than any which, in the circumstances,
-could justly arise from remaining at my post.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>He cordially and energetically assisted Admiral
-Gherardi. He secured audiences with the President
-and the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Hayti, and did
-not allow anything like offended dignity to diminish
-his zeal and alacrity in carrying out his instructions.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In the conference, Mr. Douglass supplemented the
-arguments of the commissioner in an earnest appeal
-in behalf of the United States. He urged that the
-concession asked for by his government, “was in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_301'>301</span>line with good neighborhood, and advanced civilization,
-and in every way consistent with Haytian
-autonomy; that such a concession would be a source
-of strength to Hayti; that national isolation was a
-worn-out policy, and that the true policy of Hayti
-ought to be to touch the world at all points that
-make for civilization and commerce.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>All arguments, however, failed to overcome the
-deep-seated suspicion of the Haytian people of any
-proposition to yield even one inch of their national
-dominion. While in Mr. Douglass’s opinion, the
-negotiations were ill-timed, being prejudiced by the
-previous demands of the agents of the Clyde Company,
-and by the apparent threat in the presence of
-a part of the United States Navy in the Haytian
-harbor, he yet gave it as his deliberate opinion that
-no earthly power outside of absolute force could
-have obtained for the American government a naval
-station at Môle St. Nicolas.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>He also found that Hayti was somewhat suspicious
-of the United States on account of the
-national prejudice against the color of its citizens.
-While loyal to his own government, Mr. Douglass
-scarcely blamed them for this feeling. He believed
-in the future of the little republic, and said:
-“Whatever may happen of peace or war, Hayti will
-remain in the firmament of nations and like the
-north star will shine on, and shine forever.”</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_302'>302</span>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER XV<br> <span class='large'>FURTHER EVIDENCES OF POPULAR ESTEEM, WITH GLIMPSES INTO THE PAST</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c003'>The foregoing chapters contain the important incidents
-and events in the life of Frederick Douglass.
-He lived in a great transitional period, and, in his
-struggle to gain his own freedom, he personified the
-historic events which took place during that time.
-His life was so wholly under the public eye, and
-what he did and stood for during more than fifty
-years, were so much an integral portion of these
-years, that it is impossible to obtain an estimate of
-the man apart from the history of slavery. Frederick
-Douglass and Anti-slavery, are almost interchangeable
-terms. In himself he was both the
-argument and demonstration of the things that gave
-interest and meaning to his life and times. Yet
-he had another side not exhibited in the history
-of which he was a part and which he helped to
-make. Much of a personal nature that would add
-interest to his life and partly explain the sources of
-his strength as a leader of men, can be added to the
-portrait.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The limitations of this volume will permit only a
-brief outline of some of the things that Frederick
-Douglass said and did during the last thirty years
-of his life, which chronologically belonged to previous
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_303'>303</span>chapters, but which for the sake of their
-peculiar significance are reserved for this.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>As may be inferred from what has appeared in the
-course of this narrative, Frederick Douglass was a
-more than ordinarily interesting personality. He
-was a figure to attract attention anywhere, and especially
-so during the last twenty-five years of his
-life. He was over six feet in height, broad-shouldered,
-well-proportioned, and his movements had
-all the directness and grace of a man who had been
-bred a prince rather than a slave. His features
-were broad, strong, and impressive. His complexion
-was that of a mulatto. His head was strikingly
-large, and crowned with an abundant crop of white
-hair of almost silken fineness. His eyes were
-brown and mildly animated. His voice was strong,
-but of mellow tone. When he was aroused, however,
-it would fairly thunder with the passionate
-earnestness of the man. In conversation he was delightful.
-His manner was graceful and wholly free
-from personal mannerisms. His mental and moral
-faculties were well balanced. He was a man without
-technical education, yet he had more than ordinary
-learning. All that he knew was acquired outside
-of schoolrooms and without school teachers.
-His great library bore witness to his love of books.
-In the history of governments and of races, and in
-mental philosophy and poetry, he found special delight.
-No trained elocutionist could recite verse with
-better effect. He was especially fond of Byron,
-Burns, Coleridge, and Pierpont.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>He was always quick to recognize ability in one
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_304'>304</span>of his race, and so had a peculiar fondness and interest
-in Paul Laurence Dunbar, who, at his death,
-was just beginning to be known as a poet, and who
-received his first real encouragement from Frederick
-Douglass.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>He had an unfailing memory, and consequently a
-good command of everything he ever saw, heard, or
-read. He was liked and honored by men and
-women, not only because he was interesting, but
-also because he was singularly free from crotchets,
-idiosyncrasies, and ill-temper. He was of a lovable
-disposition, and especially so in the latter days of
-his life. The all too common character blemishes
-of selfishness, envy, and jealousy were never charged
-against him. His whole nature was keyed to high,
-generous impulses. He loved the right, and hated
-wrong in any form.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>No man of his prominence was freer from vices:
-he was of temperate habits, clean speech, and personal
-rectitude. His sense of honor was not partial,
-but a controlling force in all of his relationships to
-men and things.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>He was also fortunately free from family troubles,
-except the loss by death of a beloved little daughter,
-whose few gentle and beautiful years had been
-his delight, a sorrow which deeply shadowed the
-earlier period of his public career. His wife, who
-had helped him to gain his freedom, devoted her
-life to his comfort and to the happiness of his home.
-His three stalwart sons, Lewis, Charles, and Frederick,
-Jr., honored him by lives of usefulness, and
-there was always the closest intimacy between him
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_305'>305</span>and them. His oldest girl, named Rosa, was very
-dear to him. She grew up by his side as a faithful
-helper in his work as well as a devoted daughter.
-She is widely known and loved for her culture and
-unselfish disposition. In short, Frederick Douglass’s
-family was worthy of him. If by his deeds
-he brought to them honor and opportunity, he lived
-long enough to see his example and precepts honored
-again in them.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>His home in Cedar Hill, overlooking the Capitol,
-was a delightful spot. Everything about it bespoke
-the character of the man. The broad grounds,
-shaded with trees, the well-cultivated garden, all
-told of his love of nature. Within the ample house
-there was a quiet, restful refinement, revealing the
-taste and habits of the scholar. Books, busts, and
-pictures all bore witness to that instinctive thirst
-for culture which no one who knew him well could
-fail to recognize. He had an extraordinary passion
-for the violin, and, although he did not place a very
-high estimate upon his own ability, yet he, as well
-as his nearest friends, received much enjoyment
-from his knowledge of the use of this instrument.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In later years he found a special delight in the
-fact that his grandson, Joseph Douglass, exhibited
-a decided taste and a real genius for the violin. A
-more affecting picture of the power of music could
-scarcely be imagined than that of the old man sitting
-and listening with rapt and tearful attention
-when this boy played for him some of his favorite
-tunes.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>But perhaps these glimpses of the personality of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_306'>306</span>Frederick Douglass are sufficient to suggest that,
-behind the great orator, the active politician, the
-anxious leader in a critical period, there was a real
-man, whose domestic tastes and disciplined heart
-give an added value to his public life. It is not at all
-surprising that one thus gifted should have had many
-intimates among the best people of his generation.
-The leading statesmen, educators, and literary men
-were counted as his close and personal friends. Behind
-the respect that was felt for his natural talents
-and his unusual achievements was a sincere admiration
-and even fondness for the large and warmhearted
-nature which could laugh and cry and be
-touched by the social delights of home and fireside.
-He was a man of opinions, of ideals, of imagination,
-and had the gift of adequate expression for every
-thought and emotion.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>After the death of his first wife, Mr. Douglass
-married again, in 1884, and for this step he was severely
-criticised. The fact that his second wife,
-Miss Helen Pitts, was a white woman caused something
-like a revulsion of feeling throughout the entire
-country. His own race especially condemned
-him, and the notion seemed to be quite general that
-he had made the most serious mistake of his life.
-Just how deep-seated was the sentiment of white
-and black people alike against amalgamation has
-never been so clearly demonstrated as in this case.
-Douglass was sorely hurt by the many unkind
-things said about his marriage by members of his
-own race.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The woman whom he married he had known and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_307'>307</span>admired for many years. She had helped him in
-various ways in his literary work. She belonged to
-one of the best families in western New York, and
-in following the natural impulse of his attachment,
-he failed to take into consideration the offense his
-act might give to public feeling. The resentment
-felt by the people because of his disregard of its unwritten
-law never entirely died out in his lifetime,
-but he himself got over the personal discomfiture of
-it. In addressing a large audience of white and
-colored people in Springfield, Mo., in the fall of
-1893, he referred to this incident in the following
-words: “I am strongly of the opinion that you
-will want me to say something concerning my
-second marriage. I will tell you: My first wife,
-you see, was the color of my mother, and my second
-wife the color of my father; you see I wanted to be
-perfectly fair to both races.” This clever bit of
-raillery on a very delicate subject put him on good
-terms with his audience and if any were inclined to
-think the less of him because of his marriage the
-fact did not then appear.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In the period from 1865 to the Columbian Exposition
-at Chicago, in 1893, Mr. Douglass was interested
-in many things. He made various addresses
-outside of the range of politics, and was busy to the
-limit of his waning strength. What he wrote found
-ready acceptance in important publications, and his
-absence from any great national gathering was a
-matter of regret.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Among the many tokens of respect that continued
-to come to him from all parts of the country, he
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_308'>308</span>cherished none so much as the tribute paid to him
-by the city of Rochester, his home during the
-twenty-five formative years of his career. In the
-name of the city, some of its leading citizens caused
-to be placed in Sibley’s Hall, at Rochester University,
-a noble bust of Frederick Douglass. It was a
-gracious recognition of the esteem in which he was
-held by the people who had had the best opportunity
-of knowing him. The Rochester <cite>Democrat and
-Chronicle</cite> expressed the sentiment of the city in the
-following eulogy written at the time:</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“Frederick Douglass can hardly be said to have
-risen to greatness on account of the opportunities
-which the republic offers to self-made men, and
-concerning which we are apt to talk with an abundance
-of self-gratulation. It sought to fetter his
-mind equally with his body. For him it builded
-no schoolhouse, and for him it erected no church.
-So far as he was concerned, freedom was mockery,
-and law was the instrument of tyranny. In spite of
-law and gospel, despite of statutes which enthralled
-him and opportunities which jeered at him, he made
-himself, by trampling on the laws and breaking
-through the thick darkness that encompassed him.
-There is no sadder commentary upon human slavery
-than the life of Frederick Douglass. He put it under
-his feet and stood erect in the majesty of his intellect;
-but how many intellects, brilliant and
-powerful as his, it stamped upon and crushed, no
-mortal can tell until the secret of its terrible despotism
-is fully revealed. Thanks to the conquering
-might of American freedom, such sad beginnings of
-such illustrious lives as that of Frederick Douglass
-are no longer possible; and that they are no longer
-possible, is largely due to him, who when his lips
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_309'>309</span>were unlocked, became a deliverer of his people.
-Not alone did his voice proclaim emancipation.
-Eloquent as was that voice, his life in its pathos and
-in its grandeur, was more deeply eloquent still; and
-where shall be found, in the annals of humanity, a
-sweeter rendering of poetic justice than that he, who
-has passed through such vicissitudes of degradation
-and exaltation, has been permitted to behold the redemption
-of his race?</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“Rochester is proud to remember that Frederick
-Douglass was, for many years, one of her citizens.
-He who pointed out the house where Douglass
-lived, hardly exaggerated when he called it the
-residence of the greatest of our citizens, for Douglass
-must rank as among the greatest men, not only of
-this city, but of the nation as well—great in gifts,
-greater in utilizing them, great in the persuasion of
-his speech, greater in the purpose that informed it.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“Rochester could do nothing more graceful than
-to perpetuate in marble the features of this citizen
-in her hall of learning; and it is pleasant for her to
-know that he so well appreciates the esteem in
-which he is held here. It was a thoughtful thing
-for Rochester to do, and the response is as heartfelt
-as the tribute is appropriate.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Among his notable addresses during the period
-under review was one delivered on Decoration Day
-in 1871 at Arlington. His theme was “The Unknown
-Loyal Dead.” President Grant, the members
-of the Cabinet, and a large number of the most
-prominent people of Washington were present, and
-the occasion was unusually impressive. He rose
-grandly to the need of the hour. The oration was
-in his best vein and is in part as follows:—</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_310'>310</span>“Friends and Fellow Citizens:—Tarry here for a
-moment. My words shall be few and simple. The
-solemn rites of this hour and place call for no
-lengthened speech. There is, in the very air of this
-resting-ground of the unknown dead, a silent,
-subtle and all-pervading eloquence, far more touching,
-impressive, and thrilling, than living lips have
-ever uttered. Into the measureless depths of every
-loyal soul it is now whispering lessons of all that is
-precious, priceless, holiest and most enduring in human existence.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“Dark and sad will be the hour to this nation
-when it forgets to pay grateful homage to its greatest
-benefactors. The offering we bring to-day is
-due alike to the patriot soldiers, dead, and their
-noble comrades who still live; for, whether living
-or dead, whether in time or in eternity, the loyal
-soldiers who imperiled all for country and freedom
-are one and inseparable.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“These unknown heroes whose whitened bones
-have been piously gathered here, and whose green
-graves we now strew with sweet and beautiful
-flowers, choice emblems alike of pure hearts and
-brave spirits, reached in their glorious career that
-last highest point of nobleness beyond which human
-power cannot go. They died for their country.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“No loftier tribute can be paid to the most illustrious
-of all the benefactors of mankind than we
-pay to these unrecognized soldiers when we write
-above their graves this shining epitaph.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“When the dark and vengeful spirit of slavery,
-always ambitious, preferring ‘to rule in Hell than
-to serve in Heaven’ fired the southern heart and
-stirred all the malign elements of discord; when
-our great republic, the hope of freedom and self-government
-throughout the world, had reached the
-point of supreme peril; when the union of the states
-was torn and rent asunder at the centre, and the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_311'>311</span>armies of a gigantic rebellion came forth with broad
-blades and bloody hands to destroy the very foundation
-of American society, the unknown braves
-who flung themselves into the yawning chasm,
-where cannon roared and bullets whistled, fought
-and fell. They died for their country.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“We are sometimes asked, in the name of patriotism,
-to forget the merits of this fearful struggle,
-and to remember with equal admiration those who
-struck at the nation’s life and those who struck to
-save it; those who fought for slavery and those who
-fought for liberty and justice.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“I am no minister of malice. I would not strike
-the fallen. I would not repel the repentant; but
-may my right hand forget her cunning and my
-tongue cleave to the roof of my mouth, if I forget
-the difference between the parties to that terrible,
-protracted and bloody conflict.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“If we ought to forget a war which has filled our
-land with widows and orphans; which has made
-stumps of men of the very flower of our youth;
-which has sent them on the journey of life armless,
-legless, maimed and mutilated; which has piled up
-a debt heavier than a mountain of gold, swept uncounted
-thousands of men into bloody graves and
-planted agony at a million hearthstones—I say, if
-this war is to be forgotten, I ask in the name of
-things sacred, what shall men remember?”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Five years later Mr. Douglass was again honored
-with an invitation to deliver the address in memory
-of Abraham Lincoln, at Lincoln Park, in Washington.
-The occasion and the man were happily
-blended. No orator ever had a more inspiring
-theme. The rulers of the nation in the persons of
-President Grant and his Cabinet advisers, members
-of the United States Senate, Justices of the Supreme
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_312'>312</span>Court, and a great many high officials were present
-to evidence the importance of the day; and in such
-a company of distinguished people Douglass delivered
-what many call his supreme effort as an orator.
-The speech later was printed as a pamphlet, and
-extensively read throughout the country.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>His closing words addressed to his own people,
-prescient, as they seemed to be of days and dangers
-as yet but vaguely understood, made an ineffaceable
-impression upon men of his color who heard
-him:</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“We have done a great work for our race to-day.
-In doing honor to the memory of our friend and
-liberator, we have been doing highest honor to ourselves
-and those who are to come after us. We
-have been attaching to ourselves a name and fame
-imperishable and immortal. We have also been
-defending ourselves from a blighting scandal, when
-now it shall be said that the colored man is soulless,
-that he has no appreciation of benefits or benefactors;
-when the foul reproach of ingratitude is hurled
-at us, and it is attempted to scourge us beyond the
-range of human brotherhood, we may calmly point
-to this monument we have this day erected to the
-memory of Abraham Lincoln.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In his address before the Tennessee Colored Agricultural
-and Mechanical Association at Nashville,
-September 18, 1873, he furnished the country new
-evidence of his ability to give instruction, to inspire
-hope and ambition, and to encourage thrift. Though
-not an agriculturist by occupation, his speech can
-still be used as a manual for the young farmer.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_313'>313</span>It, like his other addresses, is full of practical and
-useful maxims. His quotation from Theodore
-Parker, “All the space between man’s mind and
-God’s mind is crowded with truths which wait to
-be discovered and organized into law for the practice
-of men,” indicates the tone of high hopefulness
-that ran through all his appeals to the people. “If
-we look abroad over our country and observe the
-condition of the colored people,” he said, “we shall
-find their greatest want to be regular and lucrative
-employment for their energies. They have secured
-their freedom, it is true, but not the friendship and
-favor of the people around them.... On account
-of bad treatment, great numbers are driven
-from the country to the larger cities where they
-quickly learn to imitate the vices and follies of the
-least exemplary whites. Under these circumstances,
-I hail agriculture as a refuge for the oppressed.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Insisting that the condition of the Negro in this
-country is exceptional, he reminded his hearers that
-“the farm is our last resort, and if we fail here, I
-do not see how we can succeed elsewhere. We are
-not like the Irish, an organized political power; we
-are not shrewd like the Hebrews, capable of making
-fortunes by buying and selling old clothes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The address is rich with maxims that are good to
-remember and to use as rules of conduct; such as:</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“Emancipation has liberated the land as well as
-the people.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“It is not fertility, but liberty that cultivates a
-country.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_314'>314</span>“The state of Tennessee is now to be cultivated
-by liberty, by knowledge which comes of liberty,
-by the respectability of labor.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“Neither the slave nor his master can abandon
-all at once the deeply entrenched errors and habits
-of centuries.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“There is no work that men are required to do,
-which they cannot better and more economically do
-with education than without it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“Muscle is mighty but mind is mightier, and
-there is no field for the exercise of mind other than
-is found in the cultivation of the soul.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“As a race we have suffered from two very opposite
-causes, disparagement on the one hand and
-undue praise on the other.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“An important question to be answered by evidences
-of our progress is: Whether the black man
-will prove a better master to himself than the white
-master was to him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“Accumulate property. This may sound to you
-like a new gospel. No people can ever make any
-social and mental improvement whose exertions are
-limited. Poverty is our greatest calamity....
-On the other hand, property, money, if you please,
-will produce for us the only condition upon which
-any people can rise to the dignity of genuine manhood.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“Without property there can be no leisure.
-Without leisure there can be no invention, without
-invention there can be no progress.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“We can work, and by this means we can retrieve
-all our losses.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“Knowledge, wisdom, culture, refinement, manners,
-are all founded on work and the wealth which
-work brings.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“In nine cases out of ten a man’s condition is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_315'>315</span>worse by changing his location. You would better
-endeavor to remove the evil from your door than to
-move and leave it there.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“If you have a few acres, stick to them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“Life is too short, time is too valuable, to waste
-in the experiment of seeking new homes. People
-are about as good in your neighborhood as anywhere
-else in the world, and may need you to make
-them better.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The foregoing extracts sufficiently indicate the
-character and importance of this Nashville address.
-It was quite unlike speeches that had been made by
-most of the colored leaders to their people. While
-emphasizing the importance of hard work, of
-duties, and patience, he indulged in no false
-hopes and made no extravagant claims. The
-every-day facts, needs, and responsibilities of the
-people on the soil were, he held, the paramount
-things for men who were beginning their social development.
-In short, it was a strong and stirring
-call to the Negroes to look about them, and not
-afar, for the instruments and forces that must be
-utilized for their salvation.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Belonging to this latter period of his life, another
-address, in character quite different from the one
-just referred to, illustrates how the colored people
-have been carried from one extreme of hopefulness
-to the other of despair and uncertainty by the
-changes in public sentiment concerning them.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In 1883 the Supreme Court of the United States
-rendered a decision declaring unconstitutional what
-was known as the “Civil Rights Bill.” This was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_316'>316</span>one of the Reconstruction measures, championed by
-Senator Sumner, and, when brought forward it was
-regarded by the colored people and their friends
-as a sort of charter of liberty. It undertook to
-prevent discriminations against Negroes in hotels,
-restaurants, and other places of public accommodation.
-At the time of its enactment it was
-considered a necessary appendage to the Fourteenth
-and Fifteenth Amendments, and the colored
-people everywhere felt a strong sense of protection
-in its provisions.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>When the Supreme Court’s opinion declaring the
-law, outside of the District of Columbia and other
-national territory, to be null and void, was made
-known, it produced a sensation of alarm and almost
-despair among Negroes everywhere. They saw
-in this decision a complete reversal of the public
-sentiment that a few years before was so strongly
-favorable to them. They began to lose faith in the
-potency of the letter of the law, either to define or
-protect their rights. It was a sort of rude reminder
-that, if they would be secure in their rights, they
-must rely upon something else than mere statutes.
-Here was an apt illustration of the maxim that
-what the law gives, the law can take away. In relying
-upon only this for his salvation, the Negro
-had been suspended between hope and despair, until
-it seemed to him that there was no such thing as stability
-of sentiment toward him. The first impulse
-was to protest, in the name of all the colored people,
-not only against the letter of the decision, but also
-against haunting implications that they had no
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_317'>317</span>rights which the law of the land was bound to respect.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The spirit of resentment found adequate expression
-in a great mass-meeting arranged for and held
-in the city of Washington in 1883. Frederick
-Douglass was selected, as a matter of course, as the
-one colored man in the country who could best voice
-the feelings of the people affected by the decision.
-The other speaker was the eloquent Robert G.
-Ingersoll. The meeting was a notable one in every
-respect. The most distinguished leaders of the race
-were there, and the audience was large and earnest.
-There were present, too, a great number of prominent
-white people who sympathized with the colored
-race. The address of Mr. Douglass was one of the
-most interesting ever made by him. In it he showed
-his ability to put into the most telling form the arguments
-with which it seemed possible at that time
-to counteract, to some extent, the moral effect of
-the decision upon the colored and the white communities.
-His speech showed a wide acquaintance
-with the principles of the law and more than usually
-profound knowledge of the philosophy of democracy.
-The following extracts will indicate its
-character, and reflect, no doubt, the opinions and
-sentiments of the meeting and the time:</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“It makes us feel as if some one was stamping on
-the graves of our mothers, or desecrating our sacred
-temples.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“We have been, as a class, grievously wounded
-in the house of our friends.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_318'>318</span>“This decision has swept over the land like a cyclone,
-leaving moral desolation in its track.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“Inasmuch as the law in question is in favor of
-liberty and justice, it ought to have had the benefit
-of any doubt which could arise as to its strict constitutionality.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“If any man has come in here with his breast
-heaving with passion and expecting to hear violent
-denunciation of the Supreme Court on account of
-this decision, he has mistaken the object of this
-meeting. Its judges live, and ought to live, an
-eagle’s flight beyond the reach of fear or favor,
-praise or blame, profit or loss.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“In humiliating the colored people of this country,
-this decision has humbled this nation.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“No man can put a chain about the ankle of his
-fellow-men without at least finding the other end of
-it about his own neck.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“Prejudice is a spirit infernal, against which enlightened
-men should wage perpetual war.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“We want no black Ireland in America. We
-want no aggrieved class in America. Strong as we
-are without the Negro, we are stronger with him
-than without him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“Our legislators, our President, and the judges
-should have a care lest by forcing these people outside
-the law, they destroy that love of country,
-which in the day of trouble is needful to the
-nation’s defense.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“Oh, for a Supreme Court of the United States
-which shall be as true to the claims of humanity as
-the Supreme Court formerly was to the demand of
-slavery.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“What is a state in the absence of the people who
-compose it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“Land, air, and water do not discriminate.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_319'>319</span>What does it matter to the colored citizen that a
-state may not insult him if the citizen of the state
-may? The decision is a concession to race pride,
-selfishness, and meanness, and will be received with
-joy by every upholder of caste in the land, and for
-this I deplore and denounce the decision.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The few addresses just referred to are, in point of
-the subject-matter and the occasions that called
-them forth, the most important and able made by
-Frederick Douglass after emancipation. On each
-occasion there was a call for the supreme man of
-the Negro race and there were few, except a small
-group of colored people, to question his right to be
-so regarded.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Frederick Douglass, however, was something
-more than a “race leader”; he was always an eminent
-citizen of the republic, and as such his interests
-were not wholly rimmed about by the sorrows
-and aspirations of his own people. He was a careful
-student of his times and had an intelligent concern
-in all the great questions that arose and called
-for an opinion. It was quite in keeping with his
-cosmopolitan spirit that he should be opposed to
-the policy of our government in excluding the
-Chinese from American shores because, as he said,
-“I know of no rights of race superior to the rights
-of humanity.” His views on the question, which
-twenty-five years ago was an urgent one, are more
-fully expressed in the following extract from one of
-his addresses on the subject of the “Composite
-Nation”:—</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“Our republic itself is a strong argument in favor
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_320'>320</span>of cosmopolitan nationality.... Let the Chinaman
-come; he will help to augment the national
-wealth. He will help to develop our boundless resources;
-he will help to pay off our national debt.
-He will help to lighten the burden of our national
-taxation. He will give us the benefit of his skill as
-a manufacturer, and as a tiller of the soil in which
-he is unsurpassed. Even the matter of religious
-liberty, which has cost the world more tears, more
-blood, and more agony than any other interest, will
-be helped by his presence. I know of no church more
-tolerant, of no priesthood, however enlightened,
-which could safely be trusted with the tremendous
-power which universal conformity would confer.
-We should welcome all men of every shade of religious
-opinion, as among the best means of checking
-the arrogance and intolerance which are the
-almost inevitable concomitants of general conformity.
-Liberty always flourishes best amid the
-clash and competition of rival religious creeds.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Reference has already been made to Douglass’s
-services to the cause of female suffrage. His
-presence at nearly all of the anniversaries and
-other important gatherings of those who advocated
-the enfranchisement of women was expected and his
-utterances were warmly received.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In the matter of religion, Mr. Douglass was not
-strictly orthodox in his beliefs, although it will be
-remembered that during his enslavement he found
-much consolation in the Bible, and was for a time a
-Methodist exhorter. His religious views, as he
-grew older, underwent a radical change. He had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_321'>321</span>no patience with hypocrites. He had seen and
-heard so much that was cruel, unjust, and almost
-fiendish under the name of religion, that his faith
-in sectarianism was badly shaken. In his early
-anti-slavery addresses, he indulged in many absurd
-parodies of the pious frauds whom he had known.
-However, he was not an atheist. He had a deep religious
-sense, but was more fully under the influence
-of the theological opinions of Theodore
-Parker than of any other school of religious thought.
-His best friends and associates were among the
-Unitarians, the Quakers, and others of liberal faith.
-His views on religion are finely expressed in a bit of
-correspondence published by Mr. Holland in his
-biography. In response to a cordial invitation to
-speak before the “Free Religious Association” in
-Boston, in 1874, he wrote:</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“I cannot be present at your Free Religious
-Convention in Boston. This is, of course, of
-smaller consequence to others than to myself, for I
-should come more to hear than to be heard. Freedom
-is a word of charming sound, not only to the
-tasked and tortured slaves, who toil for an earthly
-master, but for those who would break the galling
-chains of darkness and superstition. Regarding the
-Free Religious movement as one for light, love, and
-liberty, limited only by reason and human welfare,
-and opposed to those who convert life and death
-into enemies of human happiness, who people the
-invisible world with ghastly taskmasters, I give it
-hearty welcome. Only the truth can make men
-free, and I trust that your convention will be guided
-in all its utterances by its light and feel its power.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_322'>322</span>I know many of its good men and women, who are
-likely to assemble with you, and I would gladly
-share with them the burden of reproach which their
-attacks upon popular error will be sure to bring
-upon them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Extracts from letters to friends indicate still more
-clearly the deeper currents of his thought.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“I once had a large stock of hope on hand, but
-like the sand in the glass, it has about run out. My
-present solace is in the cultivation of religious submission
-to the inevitable, in teaching myself that I
-am but a breath of the infinite, perhaps not so much.
-I was very sorry not to be able to attend the Free
-Religious Convention. I shall, hereafter, try to
-know more of these people.... I sometimes,
-at long intervals, try my old violin; but after all
-the music of the past and of imagination is sweeter
-than any my unpracticed and unskilled bow can
-produce. So I lay my dear old fiddle aside, and
-listen to the soft, silent, distant music of other days
-which, in the hush of my spirit, I still find lingering
-somewhere in the mysterious depths of my soul.”</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“I do not know that I am an evolutionist, but to
-this extent, I am one. I certainly have more
-patience with those who trace mankind upward
-from a low condition, even from the lower animals,
-than with those who start him at a point of perfection
-and conduct him to a level with the brutes.
-I have no sympathy with a theory that starts man in
-Heaven, and stops him in Hell.... An irrepressible
-conflict, grander than that described by the
-late William H. Seward, is perpetually going on.
-Two hostile and irreconcilable tendencies, broad as
-the world of man, are in the open field; good and
-evil, truth and error, enlightenment and superstition.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_323'>323</span>One of the stirring incidents of this post-slavery
-period was the “exodus movement.” In the
-summer of 1879, great numbers of Negroes, as if by
-concerted action, began to emigrate from the South
-and the southwestern states toward the North and
-West. This movement was the first manifestation
-of discontent ever made by the colored people on a
-large scale. It was in no way due to politics, but
-was rather an effort to free themselves from the conditions
-under which they were compelled to work
-and live. Their economic state was bad, and there
-seemed to be little hope of improvement. The exodus
-grew to such an extent that it produced something
-like national alarm and there were grave apprehensions
-that much suffering would attend the efforts
-of the Negroes to escape from poverty and dependence.
-Mr. Douglass has given the following reasons
-for the dissatisfaction:</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“Work as hard, faithfully, and constantly as
-they may, live as plainly and as sparingly as they
-may, they are no better off at the end of the year
-than at the beginning. They say that they are the
-dupes and victims of cunning and fraud in signing
-contracts which they cannot read and cannot fully
-understand; that they are compelled to trade at
-stores owned in whole or in part, by their employers;
-and that they are paid with orders and
-not with money. They say that they have to pay
-double the value of nearly everything they buy;
-that they are compelled to pay a rental of ten dollars
-a year for an acre of ground that will not bring
-thirty dollars under the hammer; that land-owners
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_324'>324</span>are in league to prevent land owning by Negroes;
-that when they work the land on shares, they barely
-make a living; that outside the towns and cities no
-provision is made for education, and, ground down
-as they are, they cannot themselves employ teachers
-to instruct their children.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>As a general rule, the colored people in the North
-looked upon the exodus hopefully. To them it was a
-sign of courage on the part of their Southern brethren,
-and a protest against bad treatment. Frederick
-Douglass, however, who was always expected
-to have an opinion and express it, deplored the
-“unintelligent and somewhat aimless running away
-from the ills they have to others they know not of.”
-He could see no salvation for the Negro in the
-Northern states. “For him, as a Southern laborer,”
-he said, “there is no competition or substitute,”
-and he insisted that the freedman is always to
-be “the arbiter” of Southern “destiny.” He held
-that the best place for the Negro to work out his
-salvation was at home. His arguments are condensed
-in the following extracts from his published
-views:</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“It may well enough be said that the Negro question
-is not so desperate as the advocates of this
-exodus would have the public believe; that there is
-still hope that the Negro will ultimately have his
-rights as a man, and be fully protected in the
-South; that in several of the old slave-states his
-citizenship and his right to vote are already respected
-and protected; that the same, in time, will
-be secured by the Negro in other states....
-The Fourteenth Amendment makes him a citizen,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_325'>325</span>and the Fifteenth Amendment makes him a voter.
-With power behind him, at work for him, and
-which cannot be taken from him, the Negro, at the
-South may wisely bide his time.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“As an assertion of power hitherto held in bitter
-contempt; as an emphatic and stinging protest
-against high-handed, greedy, and shameless injustice
-to the weak and defenseless; as a means of
-opening the blind eyes of oppressors to their folly
-and peril, the exodus has done valuable service.
-Whether it has accomplished all of which it is
-capable in this particular direction for the present,
-is a question which may well be considered. With
-a moderate degree of intelligent leadership among
-the laboring classes at the South, properly handling
-the justice of their cause, and wisely using the exodus
-example, they can easily exact better terms for
-their labor than ever before. Exodus is medicine,
-not food; it is for disease, not health; it is not to
-be taken from choice, but necessity. In anything
-like a normal condition of things, the South is the
-best place for the Negro. Nowhere else is there
-for him a promise of a happier future.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“Let him stay there if he can, and save both the
-South and himself to civilization. The American
-people are bound, if they are or can be bound to
-anything, to keep the north gate of the South open
-to black and white and to all people. The time to
-assert a right, Webster says, is when it is called
-into question. If it is attempted by force or fraud,
-to compel the colored people to stay, then they
-should by all means go; go quickly and die if need
-be in the attempt. Thus far and to this extent any
-man may be an ‘emigrationist.’ In no case must the
-Negro be bottled up or caged up. He must be left
-free like any other American citizen, to choose his
-own habitation, and to go where he shall like.
-Though it may not be for his interest to leave the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_326'>326</span>South, his right and power to leave it may be his
-best means of making it possible for him to stay
-there in peace. Woe to the oppressed and destitute
-of all countries and races, if the rich and powerful
-are to decide when and where they shall go or
-stay.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>These sentiments of Mr. Douglass are interesting,
-not only as having a bearing on a question still
-vital to the South, but also as showing the orator’s
-secret affection for the land of his birth and early
-struggles. In spite of his fifty years of life and
-triumphs in the North, he was still a Southerner in
-spirit and in his primary attachments. His imagination
-and memory still traveled back to the associations
-that contained more of bitterness than joy,—yet
-some joy. There seemed to be in the depths
-of his soul a living sympathy for those who were
-enslaved with himself, and who were still wearing
-the scars of servitude. The land that was worked
-by the toil and sweat of generation after generation
-of his people, and the land in which they were still
-laboring and hoping on, he loved in spite of himself.
-He believed in the race in spite of its apparent
-helplessness, and he believed in the South in
-spite of all that he had suffered. It pained him to
-see his people flee from the land of their birth, of
-their sorrows, but also the land of their better destiny.
-He would not have them abandon what
-would some day be theirs if they could but endure,
-and work, and wait.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>With this sort of attachment to the South, it is
-not strange that, even after fifty years of complete
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_327'>327</span>separation, he still cherished the hope and eagerly
-welcomed an opportunity when it was offered him,
-to return to Talbot County, Md., his birthplace.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The time of his visit to the land upon which he
-had formerly been held as a slave, was happily
-chosen so as to heighten the contrast between the
-past and present, for he was now United States
-Marshal of the District of Columbia. It required
-a vivid imagination to see anything in common between
-the barefooted, half-naked, half-starved, and
-penniless slave boy of fifty years ago and the
-stately-mannered gentleman and high government
-official of this day.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The man whose misfortune it was at that time
-to have been Douglass’s master, lay on a bed of
-sickness with little hope of recovery. Thomas
-Auld had passed the allotted three score years
-and ten. When he learned that Marshal Douglass
-was actually on his ground as a visitor, he
-at once sent for him. The name of Thomas Auld
-was made noted all over the land wherever Douglass
-had spoken concerning slavery and slave-holders,
-and because of this he had for several years harbored
-a strong resentment against his one-time runaway
-slave. Now all was wonderfully changed,
-and each was in a mood to make amends for the
-wrongs he was impelled to commit against the
-other. Mr. Douglass feelingly says:</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“Had I been asked, in the days of slavery to
-visit this man&#160;... it would have been an invitation
-to the auction block; now he was to me no
-longer a slave-holder, either in fact or spirit, and I
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_328'>328</span>regarded him as I did myself, as a victim of circumstances
-of birth and education, law and custom.
-Our courses had been determined for us and not by
-us. We had both been flung by powers that did
-not ask our consent, upon a mighty current of life
-which we could neither resist nor control....
-Now as our lives were verging toward a point
-where differences disappear, even the constancy of
-hate breaks down and the clouds of pride, passion
-and selfishness vanish before the brightness of infinite
-light.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The meeting between the ex-master and ex-slave
-was impressive and beautiful. They were both so
-overcome with emotion for some moments that
-neither could speak. Tears dimmed their eyes and
-the silence was more eloquent than words. As soon
-as he regained his power of speech, Mr. Douglass,
-with that instinctive politeness which was characteristic
-of him, made apology to his former master
-for the many harsh accusations uttered in the days of
-slavery, when passion was in the ascendency. The
-old master was equally frank and said: “I always
-thought, though, that you were too smart to be a
-slave, and had I been in your place, I should have
-done as you did.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“Captain Auld,” replied Douglass, “I did not
-run away from you, but from slavery. It was not
-that I loved Cæsar less, but Rome more.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>With this exchange of apologies and expressions
-of mutual good-will, the visit came to an end. If
-Mr. Douglass had any lingering bitterness in his
-soul, on account of the past, this face-to-face meeting,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_329'>329</span>after so many years and so many changes, had
-now forever removed it. The laws and customs
-that so often made it impossible for good men,
-standing in the intimate relation of master and slave,
-to understand and respect each other, no longer existed.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Shortly after this interview Mr. Auld passed
-away, and the fact that the Marshal of the District
-of Columbia had once been the property of the dead
-man became a matter of wide comment.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Two years later, Mr. Douglass was again a visitor
-to Talbot County. He now went on the private yacht
-of John L. Thomas, United States Collector of Customs
-at the port of Baltimore. This time he returned
-to the scenes of his early life on the Lloyd
-plantation. It will be remembered that it was here
-the boy was separated from his grandmother, and
-left the only home he ever had before he became
-free. His master, Captain Anthony, lived on the
-Lloyd estate. It was at this place, too, that he was
-cuffed and half-starved by the hated Aunt Katy,
-and saw his own loving mother for the last time.
-Standing amid the scenes of his childhood miseries,
-looking in vain for faces that he once saw or knew
-in the long ago, he embodied in himself, perhaps,
-more changes than have been experienced in the
-life of any other American.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Colonel Lloyd was away at the time, but every
-one on the estate was made aware of the visit of
-Marshal Douglass. The place was rich in traditions
-concerning this strange visitor, who had come out
-of a strange past, an era known to but few now living,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_330'>330</span>and he was treated with marked deference by
-all.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>He also visited Easton, which will be remembered
-as the county-seat of Talbot County, where young
-Douglass, with his companions, was locked up in
-jail on the charge of conspiracy to escape from
-slavery. The old sheriff, who had placed him behind
-prison-bars, was still living, and said that he
-was proud to shake hands across the chasm of nearly
-fifty years. White and black crowded into the little
-court-house and listened with profound interest to
-the address he was asked to deliver. The young
-people, who belonged to the new era of freedom,
-wondered at his eloquence, and the older ones heard
-with confused and bewildering emotions.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>There seemed to be more of romance than reality,
-more of apparition than of real substance, in this
-man, for whom, at one time, the jail, and not the
-court-house, would have been regarded as a more
-fitting place.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In the same year Frederick Douglass had another
-opportunity to revive the memories of the days
-preceding the war. He was asked to deliver an
-address on John Brown at Harper’s Ferry. He
-gladly accepted the invitation, and spoke to an immense
-concourse of Virginians, white and black,
-on the very spot where, less than twenty years
-before, he would, very possibly, have been tried
-and hanged on the charge of high treason, had he
-not escaped those who made efforts to arrest him.
-On the platform close beside him sat the man who
-was the attorney for the commonwealth of Virginia
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_331'>331</span>in the prosecution of Brown. Douglass spoke with
-boldness in his eulogy of the old raider, and what
-he said was heartily cheered.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In 1859 Douglass had fled to England as a fugitive
-from justice because of his presumed complicity
-in what was then called John Brown’s “crime.” In
-less than twenty years he was honored by many of
-the same people who had then hated his name and
-thirsted for his blood. He could rightly claim to be
-a part both of the cause and the effect of this remarkable
-revolution of public opinion. The possibilities
-of American life were, perhaps, never better
-illustrated than in his person.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In the fall of 1886, Mr. Douglass, accompanied
-by his wife, made an extensive tour of Europe and
-Egypt. He revisited some of the cities in Italy,
-and crossed the Mediterranean to the land of the
-Pharaohs. He has written most delightfully of his
-travels in his <cite>Life and Times</cite>. Everything of
-historical value in Europe meant a great deal to
-him, because he was so earnest a student of men
-and events. Of Victor Hugo, he said, on seeing a
-memorial to him, that “he was a man whose heart
-was broad enough to take in the whole world and
-to rank among the greatest of the human race.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Upon returning to this country, he had many
-pleasing evidences that he was greatly missed in
-his absence, and that his opinions were as eagerly
-sought as ever on any question that came within the
-range of his interest.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>One of the first public addresses made by him
-after his return from abroad was in behalf of woman’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_332'>332</span>suffrage, in Washington, at a meeting of the
-International Council of Women. He spoke ardently
-of the progress of the human mind as evidenced
-by the unveiling of a statue to Galileo,
-which he had witnessed in Rome. He said:</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“Whatever revolutions may have in store for us,
-one thing is certain: the new revolution in human
-thought will never go backward. When a great
-truth once gets abroad in the world, no power on
-earth can imprison or proscribe its limits, or suppress
-it. It is bound to go on until it becomes the
-thought of the world. Such a truth is woman’s
-right to equal liberty with man. She was born
-with it, it was hers before she comprehended it. It
-is inscribed upon all powers and faculties of her
-soul, and no custom, law, or usage can ever destroy
-it. Now that it has got fairly fixed in the minds of
-the few, it is bound to become fixed in the minds of
-the many, and be supported at last by a great cloud
-of witnesses which no man can number and no
-power can withstand.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In the same year, addressing a suffrage association
-in Boston, he said: “If the whole is greater than a
-part; if the sense and sum of human goodness in
-man and woman combined are greater than that of
-either alone and separate, then this government that
-excludes women from all participation in its creation,
-administration, and perpetuation demeans
-itself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In the matter of the education of his people, Mr.
-Douglass had a deep and abiding interest. It will
-be remembered that he believed in the broadest and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_333'>333</span>best possible schooling of the masses. He regarded
-it as important to consider the Negro’s opportunity
-in planning for his education. Hence it was that,
-in addressing the students of Tuskegee in 1892 on
-the subject of “Self-Made Men,” he laid special
-stress on the necessity of the learning of trades in
-connection with other training. Hence his saying
-that “the earth has no prejudice against color;
-crops yield as readily to the touch of the black
-man’s hand as to that of his white brother.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“Go on,” he continued; “I shall not be with
-you long; you have heights to ascend and breadths
-to fill such as I never could and never can. Go on.
-When you are working with your hands they grow
-larger; the same is true of your heads....
-Seek to acquire knowledge as well as property, and
-in time you may have the honor of going to Congress.
-Congress ought to be able to stand a Negro,
-if the Negro can stand Congress.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In these addresses before students in college or
-trade-schools, he took pains to urge that the man
-with a trade, as well as the man with a profession
-should be respected and honored, according to the
-amount of character and intelligence he puts into
-his work. He insisted that there was no such thing
-as servility or degradation for one who made his
-way through the world with an honest heart and
-skilled hands.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>His earnestness in this conviction is further evidenced
-by one of his last acts in behalf of his people,
-when he helped to found the Industrial School
-at Manassas, Va.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_334'>334</span>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER XVI<br> <span class='large'>FINAL HONORS TO THE LIVING AND TRIBUTES TO THE DEAD</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c003'>The last public office held by Frederick Douglass
-was that of Commissioner for the Haytian Republic
-at the World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago,
-in the summer of 1893. The government of
-Hayti erected an artistic pavilion on the Fair
-grounds, and here from May 1st to November 1st, he
-was stationed, dispensing the hospitalities demanded
-by his position and the occasion.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Interesting as was the Haytian display, it did not
-attract as much public attention as did the Commissioner.
-No person or exhibit at the Exposition so
-illustrated and exemplified human progress as did
-Frederick Douglass. In him it was personified.
-Everywhere his presence excited interest and admiration.
-In his movements through the grounds
-he was ever a striking figure. His form, towering
-far above the average man, and his snow-white hair,
-hanging in waves about his massive head, commanded
-instant attention. People, young and old,
-crowded about him, wherever he went. But not all
-were curiosity seekers. Thousands knew Mr. Douglass
-personally, had heard him speak, or were familiar
-with his history. Parents brought their
-children, that they might shake hands with him.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_335'>335</span>He was sometimes quite embarrassed by these manifestations
-of admiration and interest.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The Exposition officials appreciated the importance
-of the man, as well as his position as the
-Haytian Commissioner. No honors were unshared
-by him on account of his race. Whenever the representative
-men of the civilized governments met in
-administrative councils, Frederick Douglass was an
-honored guest and participant. His old-time eloquence
-was aroused on many interesting occasions,
-and especially when the cause of the Negro needed
-a champion. An official of the Exposition was reported
-as saying that Frederick Douglass, more
-than any other orator there, voiced the sentiment of
-the brotherhood of man. While various representatives
-would extol the people of this or that government
-or nationality, this self-made and self-educated
-man of a belated race, was always insisting
-that the man himself, as God made him, was greater
-than any geographical or national label could possibly
-render him.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>He was constantly sought for addresses on all
-kinds of occasions, and he generously responded,
-whether the call came from some obscure religious
-organization, literary society, or one of the great
-international parliaments, convened in connection
-with the Exposition.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>There were two very notable addresses by him in
-the summer of 1893, that almost excel the best of his
-many great speeches. One of these was made on
-what was known as “Negro Day” at the Exposition
-in the month of August. The vast auditorium
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_336'>336</span>in Music Hall was filled by an audience that was
-more thoroughly international in the variety of
-races represented, than any other gathering assembled
-during the progress of the Fair. In voice,
-gesture, and spirit, he seemed like some great
-prophet, bearing a message to the civilized world.
-No one who listened to this masterful plea for justice
-for the Negro race, can ever forget the inspiration
-of that hour.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The other speech was delivered before one of the
-parliaments on the subject of “good government.”
-There were present students of civil government,
-sociologists, judges of courts, representatives of the
-woman’s suffrage movement, like Susan B. Anthony,
-and others. Some striking addresses followed Douglass’s,
-but he had left the audience completely
-under his spell.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>With the closing of the Exposition in the autumn
-of 1893, ended the last chapter in his life as a
-public official. As office-holding, however, was by
-no means the most important part of his career, it
-did not require an office to keep him in view of the
-people. His prominence outlasted that of many of
-his contemporaries who were more favored than he
-in the matter of public service. He remained, up
-to the very last hour of his life, one of the few men
-of the nation of whom it never tired. This was so,
-largely because he was more a part of the present
-than of the past. Though he compassed in his life
-over a half-century of national history, he never got
-out of touch with current events, retaining to the
-end his influence on public opinion in all those matters
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_337'>337</span>in which he was peculiarly interested, and in
-regard to which his views had special authority.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>When he closed his official business with the
-World’s Fair, he yielded to a strong pressure from
-the people of the West for a limited course of lectures.
-The one thing which induced him to undertake
-this arduous task, after the months of exhausting
-duties at the Exposition, was the opportunity it
-would offer him to speak his word of protest and
-condemnation of the crime of lynching. Nothing
-in his long life of anxiety and struggle for his race
-so depressed him as did this new manifestation of
-contempt for his people. His first itinerary included
-Des Moines, Omaha, and other cities. He
-was cordially received everywhere and his denunciation
-of mob law made a deep impression. These
-addresses were in the nature of his last message and
-warning to the American people against the unchecked
-lawlessness that spent itself on those who
-were not strong enough to protect themselves.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>He returned to his restful and delightful home in
-Washington with some apparent fatigue, but no
-permanent harm in consequence of his long journey.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The last two years of his life seem to have been
-more free from care and active duties than any previous
-period. He merited a rest and he had everything
-about him to contribute to his ease and enjoyment.
-Among the trees and flowers of his ample
-grounds on Cedar Hill, and surrounded by his
-books and the comforts of his classic home, life
-went on serenely and happily.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>One of the interesting sights here was the procession
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_338'>338</span>of people of all kinds making pilgrimages every
-day to the home of “the Sage of Anacostia,”<a id='r6'></a><a href='#f6' class='c017'><sup>[6]</sup></a> as he
-was fondly called by his friends and neighbors.
-Thousands of colored persons visited him to pay their
-respects to the man whose life had been consecrated
-to the cause of their emancipation and citizenship.
-To all he was kindly and considerate. His mind
-was as alert and keen as ever, and thoroughly alive
-to passing events. He had a special fondness for
-the young men of his race, and particularly those who
-were educated and progressive. It was always an
-inspiration to him to see the numbers of young colored
-men, who were fitting themselves by study and
-application to pass civil service examinations, and
-gain for themselves positions of importance in all
-departments of the government. He frequently invited
-them to his home to dine with him, and would
-discuss with them the possibilities for their advancement
-in all lines of endeavor. He was always hopeful
-regarding the progress of these young men in
-business and in the professions.</p>
-
-<div class='footnote' id='f6'>
-<p class='c004'><a href='#r6'>6</a>. Anacostia is a suburb of Washington, and was Frederick
-Douglass’s home so long as he lived in the District of
-Columbia.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c004'>He was generous, almost to a fault, with his time,
-money, and services in behalf of any cause that
-meant a step forward for his people. His health
-was uniformly good. Every day he was either
-riding or walking about the streets of Washington,
-or in conference with those who needed his advice
-and assistance in all kinds of helpful enterprises.
-He had a part in every civic event of any importance
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_339'>339</span>in the District of Columbia. No one colored
-man before or since his death has wielded so much
-influence in all directions. He had not only won
-the esteem of the people of Washington, but he
-knew how to deserve and retain it. In the District
-government, in the public schools, and at Howard
-University, his influence was felt and respected.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>What he himself was, he had gained by hard
-work, consecration, temperate habits, and God-fearing
-conduct toward all his fellows. His life and
-achievements spoke eloquently to the young men
-about him and pointed the way to progress. Mr.
-Douglass had richly earned everything that he had,
-and those who took him as a model were made to
-realize that success comes not as a gift, but must be
-deserved and won as a reward for right thinking
-and high living. Poor as were his people in all
-things, Frederick Douglass found enough to be
-proud of in them and urged continuously upon the
-younger generation the necessity of cultivating a
-spirit of race pride,—of setting before themselves
-and the race of which they were members clear and
-definite ideals.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In nothing else was the life of Mr. Douglass so
-important as in the uplifting influence he exerted,
-directly and indirectly, upon the young men of his
-time. There were many good leaders worthy
-of emulation, but none who exercised the authority
-that he did over the opinions of the other members
-of his race. His life was an open book. Naturally
-there were those of his color who envied him; who
-sought to discredit his worth and work; who felt
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_340'>340</span>that so long as he lived and spoke, none other could
-be known or heard. The young men of force and
-intelligence, however, who had it in them to do
-something large and important looked up to and
-were inspired by the “old man eloquent” of the
-Negro race.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>It is easily possible to extend observations of this
-kind concerning the personality and influence of
-this great man during those restful years when he
-was happily free from care and public responsibilities.
-How little he thought of death! Sound of
-body and sane of mind, and always thinking and
-planning for what should come after, he lived as if
-there was no claim upon his future existence which
-he could not adjust. When death did come on the
-second day of February, 1895, it found him with no
-preparation, in the ordinary sense, for its message.
-And yet it had always been his expressed wish that
-he should go as he did—“to fall as the leaf in the
-autumn of life.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>On that day he had been attending the Council
-of Women which was meeting in Metzerott’s Hall
-in the city of Washington, and was much interested
-in the proceedings. He was an honorary
-member of that body. They were in quest of larger
-liberties for themselves, as he so long had been for
-himself and his people. When Frederick Douglass
-appeared at the convention in the morning, he was
-greeted with applause and escorted to the platform
-by a committee. He remained there nearly the
-entire day. When he returned to his home on
-Cedar Hill for dinner, he was in the best of spirits,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_341'>341</span>and with a great deal of animation and pleasure,
-discussed with Mrs. Douglass the incidents of the
-meeting.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>After the meal he prepared himself to deliver an
-address in a colored Baptist church near by. His
-carriage was at the door. While passing through
-the hall from the dining-room, he seemed to drop
-slowly upon his knees, but in such a way that the
-movement did not excite any alarm in his wife.
-His face wore a look of surprise as he exclaimed,
-“Why, what does this mean?” Then, straightening
-his body upon the floor, he was gone. The
-men who responded to Mrs. Douglass’s agonized
-cries for help, came hurriedly with physicians, but
-it was too late. Douglass was dead—without pain,
-without warning, without fear, and at a time when
-life was sweet, full, and complete. His last moment
-of enthusiasm, like his first hours of aspiration
-when a slave-child, was for liberty; if not for
-himself, then for some one else.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The announcement that Frederick Douglass was
-dead came like a shock to every one, especially to
-those who had seen him about the city during the
-day, full of animation and apparent physical vigor.
-The sad news spread rapidly and produced a profound
-sense of bereavement among all classes of
-people.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The scene at the Women’s Council, where he had
-been during the day an honored guest, was an affecting
-one. The president, Mrs. May Wright
-Sewall, in attempting to voice the sentiment of the
-members, said:</p>
-
-<p class='c005'><span class='pageno' id='Page_342'>342</span>“A report, as unwelcome as sad and solemn, has
-come to us of the sudden and most unexpected death
-of Frederick Douglass. The news cannot be received
-in silence by the Council. That historic
-figure which individually and intellectually was the
-symbol of the wonderful transition through which
-this generation has lived has been with us in our
-Council during both of our sessions to-day. When
-he arrived, an escort was directed to conduct him
-to the platform. We felt that this platform was
-honored by his presence. I am sure there was no
-divided sentiment on this subject, although we have
-here women whose families are related to all political
-parties of our country, and connected by ancestry
-with both sides of the great question. It is
-surely to be regarded as a historic coincidence that
-this man, who embodied a century of struggle between
-freedom and oppression, spent his last hours
-a witness of the united efforts of those who have
-come from so many different places and along such
-various avenues to formulate some plan for a new
-expression of freedom in the relation of woman to
-the world, society, and the state.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The mortuary arrangements at Washington were
-on the scale and of the dignity of a state funeral.
-Throngs of people lined the streets through which
-the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">cortège</span></i> passed to the Metropolitan Church where
-the ceremonies were held. Delegations of prominent
-colored men and women, from almost every part
-of the Union, came to pay their last respects to the
-dead statesman.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Within the spacious church, the scene was such
-as perhaps had never before been witnessed in this
-country. All colors and nationalities were present,
-moved by a common sorrow. Men like Senators
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_343'>343</span>Hoar and Sherman; members of the Supreme Court
-like Justice Harlan; members of the House of Representatives,
-officials of the District of Columbia,
-members of the National Council of Women, the
-faculty of Howard University, several Bishops of
-the African Methodist Episcopal Church, and other
-distinguished men and women were present and gave
-to the sad occasion the character of a national bereavement.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Floral tributes in profusion were sent by organizations
-of all kinds as well as by individuals.
-There were two that had special significance; the
-one sent by the Haytian government, and the other
-by Colonel B. F. Auld of Baltimore, the son of
-Frederick Douglass’s former owner. Fervent words
-of appreciation were spoken by Dr. J. T. Jenifer,
-pastor of the Metropolitan Church, Rev. F. J.
-Grimké, Susan B. Anthony, Mrs. May Wright
-Sewall, John S. Durham, Bishop W. B. Derrick,
-and M. J. N. Nichols, representing Hayti. The
-city of Washington, where Mr. Douglass lived so
-long and was so much esteemed, paid every possible
-tribute of respect to his memory in these impressive
-ceremonies.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>While the fallen Douglass was thus being honored
-at the national capital, the city of Rochester was
-sorrow-stricken at the loss of its “foremost citizen”
-and at once set about making “suitable arrangements
-to give his remains according to the desire he
-so often expressed,—a resting-place in beautiful
-Mount Hope, the city of the dead.” Rochester
-always claimed Frederick Douglass as her son by
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_344'>344</span>right of adoption, and that at a time when many
-other Northern cities would not have tolerated his
-presence. By order of the mayor, a special meeting
-of the city council was convened “for the purpose
-of taking such action as might be necessary and appropriate
-in connection with the funeral of Hon.
-Frederick Douglass, for many years a respected and
-beloved citizen of this city.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>At the meeting thus called, a memorial, couched
-in terms at once touching and flattering, was read
-and spread upon the records. The council also
-passed a resolution that the members attend the
-funeral in a body, and it was arranged that the remains
-should lie in state in the city hall, and that
-on the day of the funeral the public schools be
-closed, so as to give the pupils an opportunity to
-view the face of a man whose life and character were
-worthy of their remembrance and emulation.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Thus all the proceedings partook of a civic nature
-and were impressive beyond anything ever witnessed
-in honor of a Negro citizen. The services in
-Rochester were held in the Central Presbyterian
-Church. The Douglass League acted as a guard of
-honor in conducting the remains to the city hall and
-to the church. Rev. W. C. Gannett, of the Unitarian
-Church, delivered the funeral oration. No
-other in the United States was better qualified by
-natural disposition and breadth of mind to give
-adequate estimate of Douglass as a man. The portion
-of the address here quoted will afford some notion
-of the character of the eulogies uttered in all
-parts of this country and in England in recognition
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_345'>345</span>of the worth of Frederick Douglass and his work.
-Mr. Gannett said in part:</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“This is an impressive moment in our city history.
-There was a man who lived in one of its
-humbler homes, whose name barred him from the
-doors of the wealthiest mansions of our city. This
-man has come home to a little circle of his best beloved
-ones. He has come, as it were, alone, and
-our city has gone forth to meet him at its gates.
-He has been welcomed for once in the most impressive
-way. His remains have laid in our city hall.
-Our school children have looked upon his face, that
-they may in the future tell their children that they
-have looked on the face of Frederick Douglass.
-What a difference! What a contrast! What does
-it all mean? It means two things. It is a personal
-tribute and it is an impersonal tribute. It is a personal
-tribute to the man who has exemplified before
-the eyes of all America the inspiring example of a
-man who made himself. America is the land of
-opportunities. But not all men in this land can use
-their opportunities. Here was a man who used to
-the uttermost all the opportunities that America
-held forth to him, and when opportunities were not
-at hand he made them. Nature gave him birth,
-nature deprived him of father and almost mother.
-He was born seventy-eight years ago, forty years
-before anti-slavery was heard of as a watchword.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“He is not simply a self-made man, although he
-was one of the greatest. A man self-made but
-large-hearted. Who ever had better opportunity to
-be a greater-hearted man than Frederick Douglass?
-Think of the results for which he labored almost to
-the end of his life. Notwithstanding that the lash
-had been lifted from his back, still he encountered
-shrugs of the shoulders, lifting of the eyebrows, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_346'>346</span>an edging away of his fellow-men when he approached
-them, always under that opportunity of
-insult.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“But that was not all. It is not a simple tribute
-to the man. The personal tribute rises and loses
-itself in a grander and nobler thought. It becomes
-transfigured into an impersonal thought. We are
-in an era of change on a great subject. White
-people are here honoring a black people. An
-exception? Yes. Great men are always exceptions.
-An exception? Yes, but an instance as
-well, an example of how the world’s feeling is
-changing. I like to think over our 140,000 people
-of Rochester and pick out the two or three who will
-be called our first citizens twenty or thirty years
-hence. Very few in Rochester are famous through
-the North, very few are famous throughout the
-world. Yet the papers of two continents had
-editorials about the man whose remains lie before
-us. We have but one bronze monument in our
-streets. Will the next be that of Frederick Douglass,
-the black man, the ex-slave, the renowned
-orator, the distinguished American citizen? I
-think it will be. In and around our soldiers’ monument
-we group the history of the war. It is not
-only the monument of Lincoln, although Lincoln’s
-figure is represented there. It is the monument of
-the war.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“The nation to-day, thank God, is not only
-celebrating the emancipation of slavery, but also
-its emancipation from the slavery of prejudice and
-from the slavery of caste and color.</p>
-
-<p class='c005'>“Let me end with one word. There are but six
-words in the sentence, and it is one of the great
-sentences worthy to be painted on the church walls
-and worthy to be included in such a book as the
-Bible. It is his word. It is: ‘One with God is a
-majority.’”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'><span class='pageno' id='Page_347'>347</span>The vast audience that listened to these words of
-praise sadly followed Douglass’s remains to their
-resting-place in Mount Hope Cemetery, beside
-the graves of his little daughter Anna, and his beloved
-wife, the mother of his children. Few great
-citizens of the state of New York were ever more
-signally honored than was he in these last funeral rites
-by the citizens of Rochester. And this was not all.
-The suggestion of a monument by Mr. Gannett
-in his funeral address found quick and hearty
-response from the people of the city in an effort
-led by John W. Thompson without regard to race
-or color. Not only in that place, but throughout
-the country, the idea of erecting a bronze statue
-of Douglass, at his home, was taken up and acted
-upon. Generous contributions began to pour in
-from every direction. The great state of New York,
-that had honored him in so many ways during his
-lifetime, appropriated out of the public treasury,
-the sum of $3,000 for this purpose.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>The whole amount was soon raised. The ceremonies
-attending the unveiling of the monument
-partook of the character of a state event. Special
-excursions brought multitudes of people from all
-parts of New York. The Governor, Theodore
-Roosevelt, and many other state officials, were in
-attendance. His address, so impressively delivered,
-was the climax of the splendid ceremonies. His
-tribute to the great Negro was inspired by a
-sympathetic appreciation of the man and a profound
-sense of the significance of his life. He
-reminded the vast concourse of people that the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_348'>348</span>lesson taught by the colored statesman was “the
-lesson of truth, of honesty, of fearless courage, of
-striving for the right; the lesson of distinguished
-and fearless performance of civic duty.” The
-bronze figure of the great Negro stands in a conspicuous
-site in the heart of Rochester, and is as
-much a monument to the generous spirit of its
-citizens, as to the worth and achievements of him
-whose career it commemorates.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Douglass lived long enough to see the triumph of
-the cause for which he had dreamed, hoped, and
-labored. But he had lived long enough, also, to
-realize that what slavery had been two hundred
-years and more in doing could not be wholly undone
-in thirty or forty years; could, in fact, hardly be
-wholly undone since the Future is always built out
-of the materials of the Past.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>In his later years he came to understand that the
-problem, on the work of solving which he and others
-had entered with such high hopes in the Reconstruction
-period, was larger and more complicated
-than it at that time seemed. If the realization of
-this fact was a disappointment to him, it did not
-cause him to lose courage. His faith in the future
-remained unshaken. He was sane and sanguine to
-the end. Least of all did he allow himself to feel
-aggrieved or become embittered by any personal
-inconvenience that he encountered because of the
-color of his skin. At the conclusion of his Autobiography
-he says:</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“It may possibly be inferred from what I have
-said of the prevalence of prejudice, and the practice
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_349'>349</span>of proscription, that I have had a very miserable
-sort of life, or that I must be remarkably insensible
-to public aversion. Neither inference is true. I
-have neither been miserable because of the ill-feeling
-of those about me, nor indifferent to popular
-approval; and I think, upon the whole, I have
-passed a tolerably cheerful and even joyful life. I
-have never felt myself isolated since I entered the
-field to plead the cause of the slave, and demand
-equal rights for all. In every town and city where
-it has been my lot to speak, there have been raised
-up for me friends of both colors to cheer and
-strengthen me in my work. I have always felt, too,
-that I had on my side all the invisible forces of the
-moral government of the universe.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>Frederick Douglass’s life fell in the period of
-war, of controversy, and of fierce party strife. The
-task which was assigned to him was, on the whole,
-one of destruction and liberation, rather than construction
-and reconciliation. Circumstances and
-his own temperament made him the aggressive
-champion of his people, and of all others to whom
-custom or law denied the privileges which he had
-learned to regard as the inalienable possessions of
-men. He was for liberty, at all times, and in all
-shapes. Seeking the ballot for the Negro, he was
-ardently in favor of granting the same privilege to
-woman. Holding, as he did, that there were certain
-rights and dignities that belong to man as man,
-he was opposed to discrimination in our immigration
-laws in favor of the white races of Europe and
-against the yellow races of Asia. In religion, also,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_350'>350</span>he was disposed to unite himself with the extreme
-liberal movement. In all this he was at once an
-American, and a man of his time.</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>But Mr. Douglass was not merely an American,
-sharing the convictions and aspirations of the most
-progressive men of his day. He was also a Negro,
-and the lesson of his life is addressed in the most
-particular way to the members of his own race:
-“To those who have suffered in slavery, I can say,
-I, too, have suffered. To those who have taken
-some risks and encountered hardships in the flight
-from bondage, I can say, I, too, have endured and
-risked. To those who have battled for liberty,
-brotherhood, and citizenship, I can say, I, too, have
-battled. And to those who have lived to enjoy the
-fruits of liberty I can say, I, too, live and rejoice.
-If I have pushed my example too far, I beg them to
-remember that I have written in part for the encouragement
-of a class whose aspirations need the
-stimulus of success.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>And then he ends: “I have aimed to assure
-them that knowledge may be obtained under difficulties;
-that poverty may give place to competency;
-that obscurity is not an absolute bar to distinction;
-and that a way is open to welfare and happiness to
-all who will resolutely and wisely pursue that way;
-that neither slavery, stripes, imprisonment, nor proscription
-need extinguish self-respect, crush manly
-ambition, or paralyze effort; that no power outside
-of himself can prevent a man from sustaining an
-honorable character and a useful relation to his day
-and generation; that neither institutions nor friends
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_351'>351</span>can make a race to stand unless it has strength in
-its own legs; that there is no power in the world
-which can be relied on to help the weak against the
-strong, or the simple against the wise; that races,
-like individuals, must stand or fall by their own
-merits.”</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>As has been already indicated in the course of
-this narrative, Frederick Douglass never formulated
-any definite religious creed. But no one who reads
-the story of his life and work can doubt that he was
-guided and inspired through his whole career by the
-highest moral and religious motives. The evidence
-of this is not merely his steadfast optimism and faith
-in the future, but in the sense in which he regarded
-his personal mission. From his own point of view,
-the work he did for his race was not merely a duty,
-it was a high privilege:</p>
-
-<p class='c004'>“Forty years of my life have been given to the
-cause of my people, and if I had forty years more
-they should all be sacredly given to the same great
-cause. If I have done something for that cause, I
-am, after all, more a debtor to it than it is a debtor
-to me.”</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_353'>353</span>
- <h2 class='c008'>BIBLIOGRAPHY</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c025'><span class='sc'>Douglass, Frederick.</span> Narrative of Frederick Douglass,
-1845.</p>
-
-<p class='c026'>—— My Bondage and My Freedom, 1855.</p>
-
-<p class='c026'>—— My Escape from Slavery. <cite>Century Magazine</cite>,
-November, 1881.</p>
-
-<p class='c026'>—— Life and Times of Frederick Douglass, 1882.</p>
-
-<p class='c026'><span class='sc'>Holland, Frederick May.</span> Frederick Douglass, the Colored
-Orator, 1891.</p>
-
-<p class='c026'><span class='sc'>Garrison, William Lloyd.</span> Frederick Douglass as Orator
-and Reformer, <cite>Our Day</cite>, August, 1894.</p>
-
-<p class='c026'><span class='sc'>May, Samuel J.</span> Recollections of the Anti-Slavery Conflict,
-1869.</p>
-
-<p class='c026'><span class='sc'>Johnson, Oliver.</span> William Lloyd Garrison and His Times,
-1881.</p>
-
-<p class='c026'><span class='sc'>Austin, George Lowell.</span> The Life and Times of Wendell
-Phillips, 1899.</p>
-
-<p class='c026'><span class='sc'>Life and Times of William Lloyd Garrison.</span> By his
-children, 1889.</p>
-
-<p class='c026'><span class='sc'>Siebert, William H.</span> The Underground Railroad, 1898.</p>
-
-<p class='c026'><span class='sc'>Reports</span> of the Anti-Slavery Society.</p>
-
-<p class='c026'><span class='sc'>Goodell, W.</span> Slavery and Anti-Slavery, A History of the
-Struggle in Both Hemispheres; with a View of the
-Slavery Question in the United States, third edition,
-1855.</p>
-
-<p class='c026'><span class='sc'>Still, William.</span> The Underground Railroad, 1872.</p>
-
-<p class='c026'>—— Underground Railway Records, New and revised edition
-with life of author, 1883.</p>
-
-<p class='c026'><span class='sc'>Greeley, Horace.</span> The American Conflict: Its Causes, Incidents,
-and Results, 1864–6.</p>
-
-<p class='c026'><span class='sc'>Wilson, Joseph T.</span> The Black Phalanx; a History of the
-Negro Soldiers of the United States in the Wars of
-1775, 1812, and 1861–1865; 1888.</p>
-
-<p class='c026'><span class='sc'>Nicolay, John G. and Hay, John.</span> Abraham Lincoln; a
-History, 1890.</p>
-
-<p class='c026'><span class='sc'>Rhodes, James Ford.</span> History of the United States from the
-Compromise of 1850, 1893.</p>
-
-<p class='c026'><span class='sc'>Williams, G. W.</span> Negro Troops in the Rebellion, 1888.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_355'>355</span>
- <h2 class='c008'>INDEX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<ul class='index c012'>
- <li class='c027'>Abolition circulars, held up by Southern postmasters, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Abolition, sweet singers of, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Abolitionists, resent attitude of government to slavery, <a href='#Page_219'>219</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>“Anacostia, the Sage of,” <a href='#Page_338'>338</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Andrew, John A., Governor of Massachusetts, enlists Negro regiments, <a href='#Page_222'>222</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Anthony, Asa, friend of Douglass, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Anthony, H. B., favors policy of conciliation toward South, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Anthony, Lucretia, <a href='#Page_19'>19</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>her kindness to Douglass, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c027'>Anthony, Susan B., address at Douglass’s funeral, <a href='#Page_343'>343</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Anti-Slavery conventions, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a>, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Anti-Slavery societies;
- <ul>
- <li>Massachusetts Society employs Douglass as agent, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>;</li>
- <li>New England society organized, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a>;</li>
- <li>New York society organized, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a>;</li>
- <li>National society formed, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a>;</li>
- <li>British and Foreign, presents Douglass with Bible, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c027'><cite>Anti-Slavery Standard, The</cite>, anti-slavery newspaper, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Antoine, C. C., Lieutenant-Governor of Louisiana, <a href='#Page_279'>279</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>“Aunt Katy,” cruelty of, <a href='#Page_19'>19</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Auld, Colonel B. F., sends floral tribute, Douglass’s funeral, <a href='#Page_343'>343</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Auld, Hugh, apprentices Douglass to a ship-calker, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>sells Douglass his own time, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a>;</li>
- <li>sells Douglass into freedom, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c027'>Auld, Mrs. Sophia, teaches Douglass to read, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Auld, Thomas, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>his fondness for Douglass, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a>;</li>
- <li>sells Douglass, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c012'>Bailey, Frederick Augustus Washington, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Bailey, “Grandmother,” character and influence of, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Barrier, Anthony, agent for the Underground Railway, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Bearman, Amos G., assists Douglass at Buffalo anti-slavery meeting, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Bible societies, effect upon anti-slavery agitation, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Birney, James G., Abolitionist, printing press destroyed by mob at Cincinnati, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Blackall, B. F., Douglass’s telegram to, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>“Black Laws,” in Illinois, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Bliss, William C., friend of Douglass, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Breckinridge, John C., leader Southern Wing of the Democracy, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Bright, John, Douglass guest of, <a href='#Page_115'>115</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'><span class='pageno' id='Page_356'>356</span>Brougham, Lord, Douglass meets, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Brown, Box, fugitive slave, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Brown, John, <a href='#Page_182'>182</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>at Chambersburg, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>;</li>
- <li>effect of execution on anti-slavery movement, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c027'>Brown, John M., representative Negro, one of delegation to President Johnson, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Brown, William Wells, at Boston celebration Emancipation Proclamation, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Browne, Hugh M., head of “Institute for Colored Youth,” <a href='#Page_152'>152</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Bruce, Blanche K., United States Senator from Mississippi, <a href='#Page_279'>279</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Buffum, James N., accompanies Douglass to England, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>in Scotland, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c027'>Bullock, Judge, favors colonization, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Burns, Anthony, fugitive slave, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Burnside, General A. E., issues proclamation to Southern people, <a href='#Page_218'>218</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Butler, General Benjamin F., declares fugitive slaves “contraband,” <a href='#Page_222'>222</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>at National Loyalists’ Convention, <a href='#Page_268'>268</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c012'>Canada, end of the Underground Railway, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Carey, Mary Ann Shadd, Negro educator, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Cedar Hill, Douglass’s home, <a href='#Page_337'>337</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Chambersburg, Pa., place of last meeting of Douglass and John Brown, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Chase, Salmon P., contributes to support of <cite>North Star</cite>, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>encourages Douglass to visit President Lincoln, <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c027'>Christiana, Pa., bloody resistance of slave-catchers at, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Churches, colored, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Civil War, causes of, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Clark, Peter H., efforts to establish ante-bellum Negro education, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Clarkson, Thomas, Douglass’s meeting with, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Clay, Henry, member of the Colonization Society, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>favors Fugitive Slave Law, <a href='#Page_166'>166</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c027'>Cobden, Richard, Douglass meets, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Collins, John A., general agent of Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>associated with Douglass in the “one hundred anti-slavery conventions,” <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c027'>Colonization Society, American, objects of, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Combe, George, Douglass entertained by, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Constitution of the United States, a “pro-slavery instrument,” <a href='#Page_127'>127</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Cook, John F., efforts to establish ante-bellum Negro education, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>representative Negro, one of delegation to President Johnson, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c027'>Coppin, Fannie Jackson, efforts for ante-bellum Negro education, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Coppin, Thomas, efforts for ante-bellum Negro education, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'><span class='pageno' id='Page_357'>357</span>Covey, Edward, the “negro breaker,” <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Cox, A. L., delegate National Anti-Slavery Society, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Crafts, William, fugitive slave, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Crandall, Prudence, Abolitionist, imprisoned for teaching colored children, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a>, <a href='#Page_141'>141</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Crandall, Doctor Reuben, Abolitionist, imprisoned for circulating Anti-slavery literature, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Crofts, Mrs. Julia Griffith, takes business management of <cite>North Star</cite>, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>.</li>
- <li class='c012'>Dallas, George M., Minister to England, refuses Douglass passport, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Dana, Charles A., Assistant Secretary of War, encourages Douglass to visit President Lincoln, <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Davis, Alexander, Lieutenant-Governor of Mississippi, <a href='#Page_279'>279</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Davis, Richard A., aids in rescue of Anthony Burns, fugitive slave, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Day, J. Howard, colored anti-slavery orator, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Delaney, Martin R., colored anti-slavery orator, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Derrick, Bishop W. B., address at Douglass’s funeral, <a href='#Page_343'>343</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Dickinson, Anna, at Boston celebration of Emancipation Proclamation, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Discrimination against Negroes at public lectures done away with, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Disraeli, Benjamin, Douglass meets, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Dix, General John A., proclamation to Southern people, <a href='#Page_218'>218</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Dorr, Thomas W., leader of pro-slavery forces in Rhode Island contest over new constitution, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Dorsey, Thomas L., agent for the Underground Railway, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Douglass, Charles R., son of Frederick, enlists in army, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Douglass, Frederick, born at Tuckahoe, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>transferred to the Lloyd plantation, <a href='#Page_19'>19</a>;</li>
- <li>starved by “Aunt Katy,” <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>;</li>
- <li>sees his mother for the last time, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a>;</li>
- <li>sees a slave killed by an overseer, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>;</li>
- <li>goes to Baltimore to live, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>;</li>
- <li>is taught to read, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a>;</li>
- <li>gains possession of a speller, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>;</li>
- <li>buys a copy of the <cite>Columbian Orator</cite>, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>;</li>
- <li>learns to write, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a>;</li>
- <li>thoughts turned to religion, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>;</li>
- <li>sent back to the plantation, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>;</li>
- <li>justifies pilfering by slaves, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>;</li>
- <li>Sunday-school broken up, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a>;</li>
- <li>sent to a negro breaker, <a href='#Page_37'>37</a>;</li>
- <li>starts a second Sunday-school, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>;</li>
- <li>plans to escape, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>;</li>
- <li>plot discovered, <a href='#Page_48'>48</a>;</li>
- <li>sent back to Baltimore, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a>;</li>
- <li>apprenticed as a shipcalker, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a>;</li>
- <li>buys his own time, <a href='#Page_56'>56</a>;</li>
- <li>makes his escape from Baltimore, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>;</li>
- <li>marries in New York, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a>;</li>
- <li>seeks refuge in New Bedford, Mass., <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>;</li>
- <li>changes his name, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>;</li>
- <li>denied opportunity to work at his trade, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>;</li>
- <li>attends anti-slavery convention at Nantucket, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a>;</li>
- <li>invited to become a speaker for the anti-slavery cause, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a>;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_358'>358</span>takes part in political contest in Rhode Island, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>;</li>
- <li>speaks on the common at Grafton, Mass., <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>;</li>
- <li>takes part in the “one hundred anti-slavery conventions,” <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>;</li>
- <li>addresses 5,000 people at Buffalo, N. Y., <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>;</li>
- <li>is mobbed at Richmond, Ind., <a href='#Page_81'>81</a>;</li>
- <li>publishes “Narrative,” <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>;</li>
- <li>sails for Europe, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a>;</li>
- <li>is refused cabin passage on the steamer <em>Cambria</em>, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a>;</li>
- <li>meets Thomas Clarkson, English Abolitionist, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a>;</li>
- <li>makes a tour through Ireland, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a>;</li>
- <li>presented with a Bible by the British and Foreign Anti-Slavery Society, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a>;</li>
- <li>takes part in the anti-slavery agitation in Scotland, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a>;</li>
- <li>addresses the World’s Temperance Convention at Covent Garden, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a>;</li>
- <li>speaks at the Peace Convention in London, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a>;</li>
- <li>freedom purchased, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>;</li>
- <li>receives a gift of $2,500 to found an anti-slavery journal, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a>;</li>
- <li>returns from England to America, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a>;</li>
- <li>attacked by newspapers, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a>;</li>
- <li>presides at colored convention in Cleveland, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a>;</li>
- <li>reasons for founding an independent newspaper, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a>;</li>
- <li>removes to Rochester, N. Y., <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>;</li>
- <li>publishes the <cite>North Star</cite>, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>;</li>
- <li>parts company with the Garrisonians, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>;</li>
- <li>grounds for change of views, <a href='#Page_129'>129</a>;</li>
- <li>tribute to the anti-slavery society, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>;</li>
- <li>personal relations with Garrison, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a>;</li>
- <li>speaks in behalf of the rights of women, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>;</li>
- <li>difficulties in securing an education for children, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>;</li>
- <li>connection with the Underground Railway, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>;</li>
- <li>describes effects of the Fugitive Slave Law, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a>;</li>
- <li>shelters fugitive slaves from Christiana, Pa., <a href='#Page_172'>172</a>;</li>
- <li>reflections upon the Dred Scott Decision, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>;</li>
- <li>meeting with Harriet Beecher Stowe, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a>;</li>
- <li>outlines plan for an industrial school for Free Negroes, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a>;</li>
- <li>visits John Brown at Springfield, Mass., <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>;</li>
- <li>visits John Brown at Chambersburg, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>;</li>
- <li>opposes John Brown’s plan for capture of Harper’s Ferry, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a>;</li>
- <li>flees to Canada, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>;</li>
- <li>takes passage for England, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a>;</li>
- <li>recalled to America by death of daughter, <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>;</li>
- <li>on the effect of John Brown’s death, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>;</li>
- <li>supports Lincoln against Douglas, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a>;</li>
- <li>address in Chicago in 1854, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a>;</li>
- <li>welcomes the impending conflict, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>;</li>
- <li>urges the enlistment of Negro soldiers, <a href='#Page_220'>220</a>;</li>
- <li>assists in organization of Negro regiments, <a href='#Page_222'>222</a>;</li>
- <li>issues an appeal to the colored people, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a>;</li>
- <li>first interview with President Lincoln, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>;</li>
- <li>promised position of adjutant, <a href='#Page_232'>232</a>;</li>
- <li>Lincoln seeks aid to encourage escape of slaves from Southern states, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a>;</li>
- <li>invited to take tea with the President, <a href='#Page_238'>238</a>;</li>
- <li>description of reception of Emancipation Proclamation in Boston, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>;</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_359'>359</span>attends President’s reception, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a>;</li>
- <li>speaks at Rochester on Lincoln’s assassination, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a>;</li>
- <li>opposes dissolution of Anti-Slavery Society, <a href='#Page_245'>245</a>;</li>
- <li>becomes Lyceum lecturer, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>;</li>
- <li>favors citizenship for Negro, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>;</li>
- <li>interviews President Johnson, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>;</li>
- <li>replies to President’s arguments against Negro suffrage, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>;</li>
- <li>writes address to Senate, <a href='#Page_264'>264</a>;</li>
- <li>elected delegate to National Loyalists’ Convention, <a href='#Page_265'>265</a>;</li>
- <li>removes to Washington, D. C., <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>;</li>
- <li>publishes <cite>The New National Era</cite>, <a href='#Page_274'>274</a>;</li>
- <li>becomes President of Freedman’s Bank, <a href='#Page_276'>276</a>;</li>
- <li>councilman of District of Columbia, <a href='#Page_283'>283</a>;</li>
- <li>member of legislature of District of Columbia, <a href='#Page_283'>283</a>;</li>
- <li>member of the San Domingan annexation commission, <a href='#Page_283'>283</a>;</li>
- <li>addresses colored convention at New Orleans, <a href='#Page_284'>284</a>;</li>
- <li>marshal of District of Columbia, 1877, <a href='#Page_287'>287</a>;</li>
- <li>Baltimore address on “Our National Capital,” <a href='#Page_288'>288</a>;</li>
- <li>Recorder of Deeds, District of Columbia, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a>;</li>
- <li>Minister to Hayti, <a href='#Page_297'>297</a>;</li>
- <li>manners and personal character, <a href='#Page_303'>303</a>;</li>
- <li>marries Miss Helen Pitts, <a href='#Page_306'>306</a>;</li>
- <li>Decoration Day address at Arlington, <a href='#Page_309'>309</a>;</li>
- <li>address at Washington, D. C., on Lincoln, <a href='#Page_311'>311</a>;</li>
- <li>address before Tennessee Colored Agricultural and Mechanical Association at Nashville, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>;</li>
- <li>speech on Supreme Court Decision on Civil Rights Bill, <a href='#Page_316'>316</a>;</li>
- <li>opposes Chinese exclusion, <a href='#Page_320'>320</a>;</li>
- <li>views on religion, <a href='#Page_321'>321</a>;</li>
- <li>opposes the Kansas exodus, <a href='#Page_323'>323</a>;</li>
- <li>visits Thomas Auld, <a href='#Page_327'>327</a>;</li>
- <li>visits the Lloyd estate, <a href='#Page_329'>329</a>;</li>
- <li>address on John Brown at Harper’s Ferry, <a href='#Page_330'>330</a>;</li>
- <li>address at Tuskegee, 1892, <a href='#Page_333'>333</a>;</li>
- <li>aids in foundation of Industrial School at Manassas, Va., <a href='#Page_333'>333</a>;</li>
- <li>Haytian Commissioner at World’s Fair, 1893, <a href='#Page_334'>334</a>;</li>
- <li>address on Negro Day, World’s Fair, <a href='#Page_335'>335</a>;</li>
- <li>protests against lynching, <a href='#Page_337'>337</a>;</li>
- <li>death, 1895, <a href='#Page_340'>340</a>;</li>
- <li>funeral services, <a href='#Page_342'>342</a>;</li>
- <li>memorial services at Rochester, <a href='#Page_344'>344</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c027'>Douglass, H. Ford, colored anti-slavery orator, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Douglass, Lewis H., son of Frederick, enlists in army, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>visits President Andrew Johnson, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c027'>Douglas, Stephen A., policy in Kansas-Nebraska Bill, <a href='#Page_198'>198</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>debate with Lincoln, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a>;</li>
- <li>position of, defined, <a href='#Page_202'>202</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c027'>Downing, George T., visits President Johnson, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Downing, Thomas, agent for Underground Railway, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Dred Scott Decision, influence on anti-slavery agitation, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Dunlop, Alexander, representative Negro, one of delegation to visit President Johnson, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Dunn, Oscar J., Lieutenant-Governor of Louisiana, <a href='#Page_279'>279</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Durham, John S., address at Douglass’s funeral, <a href='#Page_343'>343</a>.</li>
- <li class='c012'><span class='pageno' id='Page_360'>360</span>Education, Negro, early efforts of, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Elliott, Robert Brown, Negro member of Congress, <a href='#Page_280'>280</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Ellis, Charles M., aids in rescue of Anthony Burns, fugitive slave, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Emerson, Ralph Waldo, uses influence to open public lectures to Negroes, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Everett, Edward, Governor of Massachusetts, favors law to prevent printing of Abolition literature, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a>.</li>
- <li class='c012'>Fish, Benjamin, friend of Douglass, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Fortin, Charlotte L., Negro educator, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Foster, George, anti-slavery speaker, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>associated with Douglass in the “one hundred anti-slavery conventions,” <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c027'>Foster, Stephen S., takes part in the Rhode Island contest over new constitution, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>“Free Church,” of Scotland, anti-slavery agitation in, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Freeland, William, hires Douglass, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Free Soil Democrats, rally to support the Union, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Fugitive Slave Law, <a href='#Page_166'>166</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>arouses resentment in North, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c012'>Ganes, John F., efforts to establish ante-bellum Negro education, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Gannett, Rev. W. C., delivers Douglass’s funeral oration, <a href='#Page_344'>344</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Garnett, Henry Highland, assists Douglass at Buffalo anti-slavery meeting, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>agent for the Underground Railway, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c027'>Garrison, William Lloyd, address at anti-slavery convention at Nantucket, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>assaulted in Baltimore, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a>;</li>
- <li>delegate National Anti-Slavery Society, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a>;</li>
- <li>in Scotland, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a>;</li>
- <li>attacked by papers in Cleveland, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a>;</li>
- <li>opposes Douglass’s anti-slavery paper, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>;</li>
- <li>conception of slavery, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>;</li>
- <li>and the slave-holder, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>;</li>
- <li>relation to Douglass, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>;</li>
- <li>comment on Shadrach case, <a href='#Page_170'>170</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c027'>Gay, Sidney Howard, takes part in the “one hundred anti-slavery conventions,” <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Gibbs, Mifflin W., colored anti-slavery orator, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Giddings, Joshua R., contributes to support of <cite>North Star</cite>, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>favors policy of conciliation to South, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c027'>Gleaves, Robert H., Lieutenant-Governor of South Carolina, <a href='#Page_279'>279</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Goodell, William, delegate National Anti-Slavery Society, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Gray, John A., friend of Douglass, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Greeley, Horace, letter to President Lincoln, <a href='#Page_219'>219</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>protests against treatment of Negro soldiers, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c027'>Green, Beriah, delegate National Anti-Slavery Society, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Grimké, Rev. F. J., address at Douglass’s funeral, <a href='#Page_343'>343</a>.</li>
- <li class='c012'><span class='pageno' id='Page_361'>361</span>Hale, John P., criticised by Douglass, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Hall, Primus, ante-bellum Negro teacher, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Hallowell, William, friend of Douglass, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Hardy, Mrs. Neal, binds Douglass’s wounds at Richmond, Indiana, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Harlan, John Marshall, Associate Justice United States Supreme Court, attends Douglass’s funeral, <a href='#Page_343'>343</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Harper, Frances Ellen Watkins, Negro educator, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Harper’s Ferry, John Brown’s preparations for assault upon, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Hayti, at World’s Fair, Chicago, <a href='#Page_334'>334</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Higginson, Thomas Wentworth, aids in rescue of Anthony Burns, fugitive slave, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Hoar, Senator George Frisbie, at Douglass’s funeral, <a href='#Page_343'>343</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Holland, Frederick May, describes effect of Fugitive Slave Law, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>“Life” of Douglass quoted, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c027'>Holley, Myron, friend of Douglass, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Howard, General O. O., head of Freedmen’s Bureau, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Howard University, influence of Douglass at, <a href='#Page_339'>339</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Howitt, William, remarks concerning Douglass, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Humphrey, Richard, bequeaths funds for Negro education, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Hutchinson family, lends Douglass support on voyage to England, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a>.</li>
- <li class='c012'>Improvement Society, East Baltimore, for free colored people, <a href='#Page_52'>52</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Industrial school, Douglass’s plan for, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a>.</li>
- <li class='c012'>Jackson, President Andrew, proposes Congressional legislation to prevent circulation of Abolition literature through mails, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>address to colored troops, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c027'>Jenifer, Rev. J. T., sermon at Douglass’s funeral, <a href='#Page_343'>343</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Johnson, Andrew, President United States opposes Negro suffrage, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Johnson, Nathan, gives Douglass a refuge, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Jones, John, representative Negro, one of delegation to President Johnson, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>.</li>
- <li class='c012'>Kansas-Nebraska Bill, effect on anti-slavery sentiment, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Kelley, Abby, takes part in contest in Rhode Island over new constitution, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>.</li>
- <li class='c012'>Lafayette, General, member of the Colonization Society, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Langston, John M., colored anti-slavery orator, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Lawson, “Uncle,” <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Lecture platform, effect upon anti-slavery agitation, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'><cite>Liberator, The</cite>, Garrison’s paper, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Lincoln, Abraham, debate with Douglass, <a href='#Page_199'>199</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Lloyd, Colonel Edward, vast estate of, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'><span class='pageno' id='Page_362'>362</span>Lloyd, Daniel, kindness to Douglass, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Loguen, Rev. J. W., agent for the Underground Railway, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Lovejoy, Rev. Elijah P., Abolitionist, killed at Alton, Ill., <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Lundy, Benjamin, Abolitionist, assaulted in Baltimore, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>work for emancipation, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c027'>Lynch, John R., member of Congress from Louisiana, <a href='#Page_280'>280</a>.</li>
- <li class='c012'>Madison, James, member of the Colonization Society, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Mann, Horace, uses influence to open public lectures to Negroes, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>contributes to support of <cite>North Star</cite>, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c027'>Marcy, William L., Governor of New York, favors law to suppress printing of Abolition literature, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Marshall, John, Chief Justice, member of the Colonization Society, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Martin, J. Sella, at Boston celebration Emancipation Proclamation, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Matthews, William E., visits President Andrew Johnson, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>May, Samuel J., letter to Garrison concerning Douglass, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>McClellan, General George B., warns slaves not to seek protection with Northern armies, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Metzerott’s Hall, Douglass’s address at, <a href='#Page_340'>340</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Missionary movement, effect upon anti-slavery agitation, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Missouri Compromise, puts question of slavery before people, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Mob, destroys printing press of <cite>The Philanthropist</cite>, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>interrupts Rev. O. Scott’s lecture, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>;</li>
- <li>demolishes Academy for Negroes at Canaan, N. H., <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>;</li>
- <li>disperses meeting of female anti-slavery society at Boston, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>;</li>
- <li>breaks up an anti-slavery meeting at Syracuse, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>;</li>
- <li>of Yale students, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>;</li>
- <li>burns Pennsylvania Hall, Philadelphia, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>;</li>
- <li>indulges in two days’ riot at Philadelphia, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c027'>Monroe, James, takes part in Rhode Island contest over new constitution, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>associated with Douglass in the “one hundred anti-slavery conventions,” <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c027'>Mott, Lucretia, connection with anti-slavery and woman’s suffrage, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Myers, Stephen J., agent for the Underground Railway, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>.</li>
- <li class='c012'>“Narrative,” Frederick Douglass’s, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Negroes, free, Douglass’s call to arms of, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>“Negro Pews,” at Hartford, Conn., <a href='#Page_142'>142</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Negro soldiers, at Port Royal, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>at Fort Wagner, <a href='#Page_222'>222</a>;</li>
- <li>proclamation of Confederate Government concerning, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a>;</li>
- <li>Douglass’s remarks on treatment of, <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>;</li>
- <li>number enlisted, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c027'><span class='pageno' id='Page_363'>363</span>Negro Volunteers, Fifty-fourth and Fifty-fifth Massachusetts Regiments, <a href='#Page_222'>222</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Newspapers, colored, <cite>Ram’s Horn</cite>, <cite>The Mystery</cite>, <cite>The Disfranchised American</cite>, <cite>The Northern Star</cite>, <cite>The Colored Farmer</cite>, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Nichols, M. J. N., address at Douglass’s funeral, <a href='#Page_343'>343</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'><cite>North Star</cite>, Douglass’s anti-slavery paper, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Douglass’s early experiences with, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c012'>O’Connell, Daniel, relation to Douglass, <a href='#Page_102'>102</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'><cite>Orator, Columbian</cite>, Douglass’s first book, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Otis, Joseph E., representative Negro, one of delegation to President Johnson, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>.</li>
- <li class='c012'>Palfrey, John G., contributes to support of <cite>The North Star</cite>, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Parker, Theodore, aids in rescue of Anthony Burns, fugitive slave, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Peabody, Ephraim, gives Douglass his first job, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Peace Convention, London, addressed by Douglass, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Peel, Sir Robert, Douglass meets, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Pennington, Rev. J. W. C., <a href='#Page_62'>62</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Peterson, John, efforts to establish ante-bellum Negro education, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Phillips, Wendell, advises Douglass to throw his “Narrative” in the fire, <a href='#Page_75'>75</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>aids in rescue of Anthony Burns, fugitive slave, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c027'>Pillsbury, Parker, takes part in Rhode Island contest over new constitution, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Pinchback, P. B. S., Lieutenant-Governor of Louisiana, <a href='#Page_279'>279</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Pomeroy, S. C., United States Senator, introduces Douglass to President Lincoln, <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Port Royal, proclamation of T. W. Sherman at, <a href='#Page_218'>218</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Porter, Samuel D., friend of Douglass, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Post, Isaac, friend of Douglass, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Press, its effect upon anti-slavery agitation, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Prichard, his <cite>Natural History of Man</cite>, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>“Prigg Case,” in regard to runaway slaves, <a href='#Page_166'>166</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>“Protection, Sailor’s,” character of, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Purvis, Robert, Vice-President of National Anti-Slavery Society, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>.</li>
- <li class='c012'>Quincy, Edmund, praises <cite>The North Star</cite>, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a>.</li>
- <li class='c012'>Raid, John Brown, intensifies hatred of Negro, <a href='#Page_195'>195</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Railroads, regulations enforced against free colored people, <a href='#Page_54'>54</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Railway, Underground, <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>Western and Southwestern branches, <a href='#Page_162'>162</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c027'><cite>Ram’s Horn</cite>, colored newspaper, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Ransier, Alonzo J., Lieutenant-Governor of South Carolina, <a href='#Page_279'>279</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Ray, Charles M., assists Douglass at Buffalo anti-slavery meeting, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'><span class='pageno' id='Page_364'>364</span>Revels, Hiram, United States Senator from Mississippi, <a href='#Page_279'>279</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Remond, Charles Lennox, takes part in the “one hundred anti-slavery conventions,” <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>assists at Buffalo anti-slavery meetings, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>;</li>
- <li>agent for the Underground Railway, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c027'>Rich, William, agent for the Underground Railway, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Richardson, Mrs. Ellen, purchases Douglass’s freedom, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Richardson, Mrs. Henry, purchases Douglass’s freedom, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Ross, A. W., representative Negro, one of the delegation to President Johnson, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Russell, Lord John, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Russell, Thomas, at Boston celebration of Emancipation Proclamation, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a>.</li>
- <li class='c012'>Schurz, Carl, report on Southern conditions, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Scott, Rev. O., Abolitionist, prevented from delivering Abolitionist lecture at Worcester, Mass., 1835, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Sewall, Mrs. May Wright, <a href='#Page_341'>341</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>address at Douglass’s funeral, <a href='#Page_343'>343</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c027'>Seward, William H., contributes to support of <cite>North Star</cite>, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>favors policy of conciliation to South, <a href='#Page_213'>213</a>;</li>
- <li>declaration defining issues of the war, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c027'>Shadrach, fugitive slave, the case of, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Shaw, Colonel Robert Gould, commands first Negro regiment, <a href='#Page_222'>222</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Sherman, General T. W. proclamation at Port Royal, <a href='#Page_218'>218</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Sherman, Senator, John, at Douglass’s funeral, <a href='#Page_343'>343</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Slavery and anti-slavery, issues defined, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Smalls, Robert, Negro member of Congress, <a href='#Page_280'>280</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Smith, Gerrit, distinguished from Garrison, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>contributes to support the <cite>North Star</cite>, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>;</li>
- <li>member of the Colonization Society, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c027'>Smith, Doctor James McCune, colored anti-slavery orator, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>agent for the Underground Railway, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c027'>Stanton, Edwin M., Secretary of War, offers Douglass commission in army, <a href='#Page_232'>232</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Stearns, Major George L., writes to Douglass in behalf of Negro soldiers, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>St. Michaels, Douglass’s early home, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Still, William, anti-slavery author, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>agent for the Underground Railway, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c027'>Story, Joseph, Justice Supreme Court, decision in the “Prigg Case,” <a href='#Page_166'>166</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Stowe, Harriet Beecher, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Sumner, Charles, uses influence to open public lectures for Negroes, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>contributes to support of <cite>North Star</cite>, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c012'>Tappan, Arthur, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>chosen President National Anti-Slavery Society, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c027'>Tappan, Lewis, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Temperance Convention, World’s, addressed by Douglass, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'><span class='pageno' id='Page_365'>365</span>Thompson, George, Abolitionist, in Scotland, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Thompson, John W., plans erection of Douglass statue, <a href='#Page_347'>347</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Tilton, Theodore, marches with Douglass at National Loyalists’ Convention, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Tracy Seminary, Douglass’s daughter compelled to leave, <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Tract Society, effect upon anti-slavery agitation, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Tuskegee, Douglass visits, <a href='#Page_333'>333</a>.</li>
- <li class='c012'>“Vigilance Committee,” of anti-slavery society, work of in Pennsylvania, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a>.</li>
- <li class='c012'>Ward, Samuel R., colored anti-slavery orator, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Webster, Daniel, remarks on growth of cotton industry, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>member of the Colonization Society, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>;</li>
- <li>favors Fugitive Slave Law, <a href='#Page_166'>166</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c027'>Wells, Nelson, efforts to establish ante-bellum Negro education, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Whipper, William, agent for the Underground Railway, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>one of delegation to President Johnson, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c027'>Whittier, John G., delegate National Anti-Slavery Society, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Winthrop, Senator Robert C., at Faneuil Hall after fall of Richmond, <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Wise, Henry A., Governor of Virginia, letter to President Buchanan, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Wright, Elizur, delegate National Anti-Slavery Society, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Wright, Frances, connection with anti-slavery and woman’s suffrage, <a href='#Page_136'>136</a>.</li>
- <li class='c027'>Wright, Theodore S., assists Douglass at Buffalo anti-slavery meeting, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-<div class='pbb'>
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