STILL'S
UNDERGROUND RAIL ROAD RECORDS,
REVISED EDITION.
(Previously Published in 1879 with title: The Underground Railroad)
WITH A LIFE OF THE AUTHOR.
NARRATING
THE HARDSHIPS, HAIRBREADTH ESCAPES AND DEATH STRUGGLES
OF THE
SLAVES
IN THEIR EFFORTS FOR FREEDOM.
TOGETHER WITH
SKETCHES OF SOME OF THE EMINENT FRIENDS OF FREEDOM, AND
MOST LIBERAL AIDERS AND ADVISERS OF THE ROAD
BY
WILLIAM STILL,
For many years connected with the Anti-Slavery Office in
Philadelphia, and Chairman of the Acting
Vigilant Committee of the Philadelphia Branch of the Underground
Rail Road.
Illustrated with 70 Fine Engravings
by Bensell, Schell and Others,
and Portraits from Photographs from Life.
Thou shalt not deliver unto his
master the servant that has escaped from his master unto thee. -
Deut. xxiii 16.
SOLD ONLY BY SUBSCRIPTION.
PHILADELPHIA:
WILLIAM STILL, PUBLISHER
244 SOUTH TWELFTH STREET.
1886
pp. 755 - 780
FRANCES
ELLEN WATKINS HARPER
pp. 755 - 780
The narratives and labors of eminent colored men
such as Banneker, Douglass, Brown, Garnet,
and others, have been written and sketched very
fully for the public, and doubtless with
advantage to the cause of freedom. But
there is not to be found in any written work
portraying the Anti-Slavery struggle, (except in
the form of narratives,) as we are aware of, a
sketch of the labors of any eminent colored
woman. We feel, therefore, not only glad
of the opportunity to present a sketch not
merely of the leading colored poet in the United
States, but also of one of the most liberal
contributors, as well as one of the ablest
advocates of the Underground Rail Road and of
the slave.
No extravagant praise of any kind- only simple facts
are needed to portray the noble deeds of this
faithful worker.
The want of space forbids more than a brief reference
to her early life.
Francis Ellen Watkins Harper (Watkins being her
maiden name) was born in the City of Baltimore
in 1825, not of slave parentage, but subjected
of course to the oppressive influence which bond
and free alike endured under slave laws.
Since reaching her majority, in looking back,
the following sentences from her own pen express
the loneliness of her childhood days.
"Have I yearned for a mother's love? The
grave was my robber. Before three years
had scattered their blight around my path, death
had won my mother from me. Would the
strong arm of a brother have been welcome?
I was my mother's only child." Thus she
fell into the hands of an aunt, who
watched over her during these early helpless
years. Rev. William Watkins, an
uncle, taught a school in Baltimore for free
colored children, to which she was sent until
she was about thirteen years of age. After
this period, she was put out to work to earn
her own living. [Page 756]
She had many trials to endure which she would fain forget; but in
the midst of them all she had an ardent thirst for knowledge and a
remarkable talent for composition, as she evinced at the age of
fourteen in an article which attracted the attention of the lady in
whose family she was employed, and others. In this situation
she was taught sewing, took care of the children, &c.; and at the
same time, through the kindness of her employer, her greed for books
was satisfied so far as was possible from occasional half-hours of
leisure. She was noted for her industry, rarely trifling away
time as most girls are wont to do in similar circumstances.
Scarcely had she reached her majority ere she had written a number
of prose and poetic pieces which were deemed of sufficient merit to
publish in a small volume called “Forest Leaves.” Some of her
productions found their way into newspapers and attracted attention.
The ability exshibited in some of her productions was so remarkable
that some doubted and others denied their originality. Of this
character we here copy an extract from one of her early prose
productions:
CHRISTIANITY.
"Christianity is a system
claiming God for its author, and the welfare of man for its object.
It is a system so uniform, exalted and pure, that the loftiest
intellects have acknowledged its influence, and acquiesced in the
justness of its claims. Genius has bent fromhis erractic
course to gather fire from her altars, and pathos from the agony of
Gethsemane and the sufferings of Cavalry. Philosophy and
science have paused amid their speculative researches and wondrous
revelations to gain wisdom from her teachings and knowledge from her
precepts. Poetry has culled her fairest flowers and wreathed
her softest to bind her Author's 'bleeding brow.' Music has
strung her sweetest lyres and breathed her noblest strains to
celebrate his fame; whilst Learning has bent from her lofty heights
to bow at the lowly cross. The constant friend of man, she has
stood by him in his hour of greatest need. She has cheered the
prisoner in his cell, and strengthened the martyr at the stake.
She has nerved the frail and shrinking heart of woman for
high and holy deeds. The worn and weary have rested their
fainting heads upon her bosom, and gathered strength from her words
and courage from her counsels. She has been the staff of
decrepit age and the joy of manhood in its strength. She has
bent over the form of lovely childhood, and suffered it to have a
place in the Redeemer's arms. She has stood by the bed of the
dying, and unveiled the glories of eternal life, gilding the
darkness of the tomb with the glory of the resurrection.”
Her mind
being of a strictly religious caste, the effusions from her pen all
savor of a highly moral and elevating tone.
About the year 1851 she left Baltimore to seek a home
in a Free State, and for a short time resided in Ohio, where she was
engaged in teaching. Contrary to her expectations, her adopted
home and calling not proving satisfactory, she left that State and
came to Pennsylvania as a last resort, and again engaged in teaching
at Little York. Here she not only had to encounter the trouble
of dealing with unruly children, she was sorely oppressed with the
thought of the conditions of her people in Maryland. Not
unfrequently she gave utterance to such expressions as the
following:
Her mind
being of a strictly religious caste, the effusions from her pen all
savor of a highly moral and elevating tone.
About the year 1851 she left Baltimore to seek a home
in a Free State, and for a short time resided in Ohio, where she was
engaged in teaching. Contrary to her expectations, her adopted
home and calling not proving satisfactory, she left that State and
came to Pennsylvania as a last resort, and again engaged in teaching
at Little York. Her she not only had to encounter the trouble
of dealing with unruly children, she was sorely oppressed with the
thought of the condition of her people in Maryland. Not
unfrequently she gave utterance to such expressions as the
following:
[Page 757]
"Not that we have not a right to breathe the air as freely as
anybody else here (in Baltimore), but we are treated worse than
aliens among a people whose language we speak, whose religion we
profess, and whose blood flows and mingles in our veins.
* * *
Homeless in the land of our birth and worse off than strangers in
the home of our nativity." During her stay in York she had
frequent opportunities of seeing passengers on the Underground Rail
Road. In one of her letters she thus alluded to a traveler: "I
saw a passenger per the Underground Rail Road yesterday; did
he arrive safely? Notwithstanding that abomination of the
nineteenth century - the Fugitive Slave Law - men still determine to
be free. Notwithstanding all the darkness in which they keep
the slaves, it seems that somehow light is dawning upon his minds.
* * These poor
fugitives are a property that can walk. Just to think that
from the rainbow-crowned Niagara to the swollen waters of the
Mexican Gulf, from the restless murmur of the Atlantic to the
ceaseless roar of the Pacific, the poor, half-starved, flying
fugitive has no resting-place for the sole of his foot!"
Whilst hesitating whether or not it would be best to
continue teaching, she wrote to a friend for advice as follows:
"What would you do if you were in my place? There are no
people that need all the benefits resulting from a well-directed
education more than we do. The condition of our people, the
wants of our children, and the welfare of our race demand the aid of
every helping hand, the God-speed of every Christian heart. It
is a work of every helping hand, the God-speed of every Christian
heart. It is a work of time, a labor of patience, to become an
effective school teacher; and it should be a work of love in which
they who engage should not abate heart or hope until it is done.
And after all, it is one of woman's most sacred rights to have the
privilege of forming the symmetry and rightly adjusting the mental
balance of an immortal mind." "I ahve written a lecture on
education, and I am also writing a small book."
Thus, whilst filling her vocation as a teacher in
Little York, was she deeply engrossed in thought as to how she could
best promote the welfare of her race. But as she was devoted
to the work in hand, she soon found that fifty-three untrained
little urchins overtaxed her naturally delicate physical powers; it
also happened just about this time that she was further moved to
enter the Anti-Slavery field as a lecturer substantially by the
following circumstance: About the year 1853, Maryland, her
native State, had enacted a law forbidding free people of color from
the north from coming into the State on pain of being imprisoned and
sold into slavery. A free man, who had unwittingly violated
this infamous statute, had recently been sold to Georgia, and had
escaped thence by secreting himself behind the wheel-house of a boat
bound northward; but before he reached the desired haven, he was
discovered and remanded to slavery. It was reported that he
died soon after from the effects of exposure and suffering. In
a letter to
[Page 758]
a friend referring to this outrage, Mrs. Harper thus wrote:
"Upon that grave I pledged myself to the Anti-Slavery cause."
Having thus decided, she wrote in a subsequent letter,
"It may be that God himself has written upon both my heart and brain
a commission to use time, talent and energy in the cause of
freedom." In this abiding faith she came to Philadelphia,
hoping that the way would open for usefulness, and to publish here
little book (above referred to). She visited the Anti-Slavery
Office and read Anti-Slavery documents with great avidity; in the
mean time making her home at the station of the Underground Rail
Road, where she frequently saw passengers and heard their melting
tales of suffering and wrong, which intensely increased her sympathy
in their behalf. Although anxious to enter the Anti-Slavery
field as a worker, her modesty prevented her from pressing her
claims; consequently as she was but little known, being a young and
homeless maiden (an exile by law), no especial encouragement was
tendered her by Anti-Slavery friends in Philadelphia.
During her stay in Philadelphia she published some
verses entitled, "Eliza Harris crossing the River on
the Ice." It was deemed best to delay the issuing of the book.
After spending some weeks in Philadelphia, she
concluded to visit Boston. Here she was treated with the
kindness characteristic of the friends in the Anti-Slavery Office
whom she visited, but only made a brief stay, after which she
proceeded to New Bedford, the "hot-bed of the fugitives" in
Massachusetts, where by invitation she addressed a public meeting on
the subject of Education and the Elevation of the Colored Race.
The occasion and result of the commencement of her
public career was thus given by her own pen in a letter dated
August, 1854:
"Well, I am out lecturing. I have
lectured every night this week; besides addressed a Sunday-school,
and I shall speak, if nothing prevent, to night. My
lectures have met with success. Last night I lectured in a
white church in Providence. Mr. Gardener was present,
and made the estimate of about six hundred persons. Never,
perhaps, was a speaker, old or young, favored with a more attentive
audience. * *
* My voice is not wanting in strength, as I
am aware of, to reach pretty well over the house. The church
was the Roger Williams; the pastor, a Mr. Furnell, who
appeared to be a kind and Christian man. *
* * My maiden
lecture was Monday night in New Bedford on the Elevation and
Education of our People. Perhaps as intellectual a place as
any I was ever at of its size.
Having thus won her way
to a favorable position as a lecturer, the following month she was
engaged by the State Anti-Slavery Society of Maine, with what
success appears from one of her letters bearing date - Buckstown
Centre, Sept. 28, 1854:
"The agent of the State Anti-Slavery
Society of Maine travels with me, and she is a pleasant, dear, sweet
lady. I do like her so. We travel together, eat
together, and sleep
[Page 759]
together. (She is a white woman.) In fact I have
not been in one colored person's house since I left Massachusetts;
but I have a pleasant time. My life reminds me of a beautiful
dream. What a difference between this and York!
* * I have met with
some of the kindest treatment up here that I have ever received.
* * I have lectured
three times this week. After I went from Limerick, I went to
Springvale; there I spoke on Sunday night at an Anti-Slavery
meeting. Some of the people are anti-Slavery, Anti-rum and
Anti-Catholic; and if you could see our Maine ladies, - some of them
among the noblest types of womanhood you have ever seen! They
are for putting men of Anti-Slavery principles in office,
I I to cleanse the
corrupt fountains of our government by sending men of Congress who
will plead for our down-trodden and oppressed brethren, our crushed
and helpless sisters whose tears and blood bedew our soil, whose
chains are clanking 'neath our proudest banners, whose cries and
groans amid our loudest paeans rise."
Everyone in this latitude
doors opened before her, and her gifts were universally recognized
as a valuable acquisition to the cause. In the letter above
referred to she said: "I spoke in Boston on Monday night.
* * *
Well, I am but one, but can do something, and, God helping me, I
will try. Mr. Brister from Lowell addressed the
meeting; also Rev. _____, Howe. We had a good
demonstration."
Having read the narrative of Solomon Northrup (12
years a slave), she was led to embrace the Free Labor doctrine most
thoroughly; and in a letter dated at Temple, Maine, Oct. 20, 1854,
after expressing the interest she took in the annual meeting of the
Anti-Slavery Society of that state, she remarked:
"I spoke on Free Produce, and now by the
way I believe in that kind of Abolition. Oh, it does seem to
strike at one of the principal roots of the matter. I have
commenced since I read Solomon Northrup. Oh, if Mrs.
Stowe has clothed American slavery in the graceful garb of
fiction, Solomon Northrup comes up from the dark habitation
of Southern cruelty where slavery fattens and feasts on human blod
with such mournful revelations that one might almost wish for the
sake of humanity that the tales of horror which he reveals were not
so. Oh, how can we pamper our appetites upon luxuries drawn
from reluctant fingers? Oh, could slavery exist long if it did
not sit on a commercial throne? I have read somewhere, if I
remember aright, of a Hindoo being loth to cut a tree because being
a believer in the transmigration of souls, he thought the soul of
his father had passed into it. *
* * Oh, friend,
beneath the most delicate preparations of the cane can you not see
the stinging lash and clotted whip? I have reason to be
thankful that I am able to give a little more for a Free Labor
dress, if it is coarser. I can thank God that upon its warp
and woof I see no stain of blood and tears; that to procure a little
finer muslin for my limbs no crushed and broken heart went out in
sighs, and that from the field where it was raised went up no wild
and startling cry until the throne of God to witness there in
language deep and strong, that in demanding that cotton I was
nerving oppression's hand for deeds of gilt and crime. If the
liberation of the slave demanded it, I could consent to part with a
portion of the blood from my own veins if that would do him any
good.
After having thus alluded
to free labor, she gave a short journal of the different places
where she had recently lectured form the 5th of September to the
20th of October, which we mention here simply to show the per-
[Page 760]
severance which characterized her as an advocate of her enslaved
race, and at the same time show how doors everywhere opened to her:
Portland, Monmouth Centre, North Berwick, Limerick (two meetings),
Springvale, Portsmouth, Elliott, Waterborough (spoke four times),
Lyman, Saccarappo, Moderation, Steep Falls (twice), North Buxton,
Goram, Gardner, Litchfield, twice, Monmouth Ridge twice, Monmouth
Centre three times, Litchfield second time, West Waterville twice,
Livermore Temple. Her ability and labors were everywhere
appreciated, and her meetings largely attended. In subsequent
letter referring to the manner that she was received, she wrote, "A
short while ago when I was down this way I took breakfast with the
then Governor of Maine."
For a year and a half she continued in the Eastern
States, speaking in most or all of them with marked success; the
papers meting out to her full commendation for her efforts.
The following extract clipped from the Portland Daily Press,
respecting a lecture that she was invited to deliver after the war
by the Mayor (Mr. Washburne) and others, is a fair sample of
notices from this source:
"She spoke for nearly an
hour and a half, her subject being 'The Mission of the War, and the
Demands of the Colored Race in the Work of Reconstruction;' and we
have seldom seen an audience more attentive, better pleased, or more
enthusiastic. Mr. Harper has a splendid articulation,
uses chaste, pure language, has a pleasant voice, and allows no one
to tire of hearing her. We shall attempt no abstract of her
address; none that we could make would do her justice. It was
one of which any lecturer might feel proud, and her reception by a
Portland audience was all that could be desired. We have seen
no prises of her that were overdrawn. We have heard Miss
Dickinson, and do not hesitate to award the palm to her darker
colored sister."
In 1856, desiring to see
the fugitives in Canada, she visited the Upper Province, and in a
letter dated at Niagara Falls, Sept. 12th, she unfolded her mind in
the following language:
"Well, I have gazed for the first time
upon Free Land, and, would you believe it, tears sprang to my eyes,
and I wept. Oh, it was a glorious sight to gaze for the first
time on a land where a poor slave flying from our glorious land of
liberty would in a moment find his fetters broken, his shackles
loosed, and whatever he was in the land of Washington, beneath the
shadow of Bunker Hill Monument or even Plymouth Rock, here he
becomes a man and a brother. I have gazed on Harper's Ferry,
or rather the rock at the Ferry; I have seen it towering up in
simple grandeur, with the gentle Potomac gliding peacefully at its
feet, and felt that that was God's masonry, and my soul had expanded
in gazing on its sublimity I have seen the ocean singing its
wild chorus of sounding waves, and ecstacy has thrilled upon the
living chords of my heart. I have since then seen the
rainbow-crowned Niagara chanting the choral hymn of Omnipotence,
girdled with grandeur, and robed with glory; but none of these
things have melted me as the first sight of Free Land.
Towering mountains lifting their hoary summits to catch the first
faint flush of day when the sunbeams kiss the shadows from morning's
drowsy face may expand and exalt your soul. The first view of
the ocean may fill you with strange delight. Niagara - the
great, the glorious Niagara - may hush your spirit with its
ceaseless thunder; it may charm you
[Page 761]
with its robe of crested spray and rainbow crown; but the land of
freedom was a lesson of deeper significance than foaming waves or
towering mounts."
While in Toronto she
lectured, and was listened to with great interest; but she made only
a brief visit, thence returning to Philadelphia, her adopted home.
With her newly acquired reputation as a lecturer,
from 1856 and 1859 she continued her labors in Pennsylvania, New
Jersey, New York, Ohio, &c. In the meantime she often came in
contact with Underground Rail Road passengers, especially in
Philadelphia. None sympathized with them more sincerely or
showed a greater willingness to render them material aid. She
contributed apparently with the same liberality as though they were
her own near kin. Even when at a distance, so deep was her
interest in the success of the Road, she frequently made it her
business to forward donations, and carefully inquire into the state
of the treasury. The Chairman of the Committee might publish a
volume of interesting letters from her pen relating to the
Underground Rail Road and kindred topics; but a few extracts must
suffice. We here copy from a letter dated at Rushsylvania,
Ohio, Dec. 15th: " I send you to-day two dollars for the
Underground Rail Road. It is only a part of what I subscribed
at your meeting. May God speed the flight of the slave as he
speeds through our Republic to gain his liberty in a monarchical
land. I am still in the lecturing field, though not very
strong physically. *
* * Send me word
what I can do for the fugitive."
From Tiffin, Ohio, March 31st, touching the news of a
rescue in Philadelphia, she thus wrote:
"I see by the Cincinnati papers that you
have had an attempted rescue and a failure. That is sad!
Can you not give me the particulars? and if there is anything that I
can do for them in money or words, call upon me. This is a
common cause; and if there is any burden to be borne in the
Anti-slavery cause - anything to be done to weaken our hateful
chains or assert our manhood or womanhood, I have a right to do my
share of the work. The humblest and feeblest of us an do
something; and though I may be deficient in many of the
conventionalisms of city life, and be considered as a person of good
impulses, but unfinished, yet if there is common rough work to be
done, call on me."
Mrs. Harper was
not content to make speeches and receive plaudits, but was ever
willing to do the rough work and to give material aid wherever
needed.
From another letter dated Lewis Centre, Ohio, we copy
the following characteristic extract:
"Yesterday I sent
you thirty dollars. Take five of it for the rescuers (who were
in prison), and the rest pay away on the books. My offering is
not large; but if you need more, send me word. Also how comes
on the Underground Rail Road? Do you need anything for that?
You have probably heard of the shameful outrage of a colored man or
boy named Wagner, who was kidnapped in Ohio and carried
across the river and sold
[Page 762]
for a slave. *
* * Ohio has become
a kind of a negro hunting ground, a new Congo's coast and Guinea's
shore. A man was kidnapped almost under the shadow of our
capital. Oh, was it not dreadful? *
* * Oh, may the
living God prepare me for an earnest and faithful advocacy of the
cause of justice and right!"
In those days the blows
struck by the hero, John Brown, were agitating the nation.
Scarcely was it possible for a living soul to be more deeply
affected than this female advocate. Nor did her sympathies end
in mere words. She tendered material aid as well as heartfelt
commiseration.
To John Brown's wife* she sent through the
writer the following letter:
LETTER TO JOHN BROWN'S WIFE.
FARMER CENTRE, OHIO, Nov. 14th
MY DEAR
MADAM: - In an hour like this the common words of sympathy may seem
like idle words, and yet I want to say something to you, the noble
wife of the hero of the nineteenth century. Belonging to the
race your dear husband reached forth his hand to assist, I need not
tell you that my sympathies are with you. I thank you for the
brave words you have spoken. A republic that produces such a
wife and mother may hope for better days. Our heart may grow
more hopeful for humanity when it sees the sublime sacrifice it is
about to receive from his hands. Not in vain has your dear
husband periled all, if the martyrdom of one hero is worth more than
the life of a million cowards. From the prison comes forth a
about of triumph over that power whose ethics are robbery of the
feeble and oppression of the weak, the trophies of whose chivalry
are a plundered cradle and a scourged and bleeding woman. Dear
sister, I thank you for the brave and noble words that you have
spoken. Enclosed I send you a few dollars as a token of my
gratitude, reverence and love.
|
Yours respectfully, |
FRANCES ELLEN WATKINS. |
Post
Office address: care of William Still, 107th Fifth St.,
Philadelphia, Penn.
May God, our own God, sustain you in the
hour of trial. If there is one thing on earth I can do for
you or yours, let me be apprized. I am at your service.
Not
forgetting Brown's comrades, who were then lying in
prison under sentence of death, true to the best impulses of her
generous heart, she thus wrote relative to these ill-fated
prisoners, from Montpellier, Dec. 12th:
“ I
thank you for complying with my request. (She had
previously ordered a box of things to be forwarded to them.)
And also that you wrote to them. You see Brown
towered up so bravely that these doomed and fated men may have
been almost overlooked, and just think that I am able to send
one my through the night around them. And as their letters
came too late to answer in time. I am better satisfied
that you wrote. I hope the things will reach them.
Poor doomed and fated men! Why did you not send them more
things? Please send me the bill of expense.
* * Send me word
what I can do for the fugitives. Do you need any money?
Do I not owe you on the old bill (pledge)? Look carefully
and see if I have paid all. Along with this letter I send
you one for Mr. Stephens (one of Brown's
men), and would ask you to send him a box of nice things every
week till he dies or is acquitted. I understand the balls
have not been extracted from him. Has not this suffering
been overshadowed by the glory that gathered around the brave
old
---------------
* Mrs. Harper passed two weeks with Mrs.
Brown at the house of the writer while she was awaiting the
execution of her husband, and sympathized with her most deeply.
[Page 763]
as possible with sympathy. *
* * Now, my friend,
fulfil this to the letter. Oh, is it not a privilege, if you
are sisterless and lonely, to be a sister to the human race, and to
place your heart where it may throb close to down-trodden humanity?"
On
another occasion in writing from the lecturing field hundreds of
miles away from Philadelphia, the sympathy she felt for the
fugitives found expression in the following language:
“How
fared the girl who came robed in male attire? Do write me
every time you write how many come to your house; and, my dear
friend, if you have that much in hand of mine from my books, will
you please pay the Vigilance Committee two or three dollars for me
to help carry on the glorious enterprise. Now, please do not
write back that you are not going to do any such thing. Let me
explain a few matters to you. In the first place, I am able to
give something. In the second place, I am willing to do so.
* * *
Oh, life is fading away, and we have but an hour of time!
Should we not, therefore, endeavor to let its history gladden the
earth? The nearer we ally ourselves to the wants and woes of
humanity in the spirit of Christ, the closer we get to the
great heart of God; the nearer we stand by the beating of the
pulse of universal love.”
Doubtless
it has not often been found necessary for persons desirous of
contributing to benevolent causes to first have to remove
anticipated objections. Nevertheless in some cases it would
seem necessary to admonish her not to be quite so liberal; to
husband with a little more care her hard-earned income for a “rainy
day,’’ as her health was not strong.
“My
health," she wrote at that time, “is not very strong, and I may have
to give up before long, I may have to yield on account of my voice,
which I think, has become somewhat affected. I might be so
glad it it was only so that I could go home among my own kindred and
people, but slavery comes up like a dark shadow between me and the
home of my childhood. Well, perhaps it is my lot to die from
home and be buried among strangers; and yet I do not regret that I
have espoused this cause; perhaps 1 have been of some service to the
cause of human rights, and I hope the consciousness that I have not
lived in vain, will be a halo of peace around my dying bed; a
heavenly sunshine lighting up the dark valley and shadow of death.”
Notwithstanding this yearning for home, she was far from desiring at
her death, a burial in a Slave State, as the following clearly
expressed views show:
“I have
lived in the midst of oppression and wrong, and I am saddened by
every captured fugitive in the North; a blow has been struck at my
freedom, in every hunted and down-trodden slave in the South; North
and South have both been guilty, and they that sin must suffer.”
Also, in
harmony with the above sentiments, came a number of verses
appropriate to her desires in this respect, one of which we here
give as a sample :
" Make me a. grave where’er you will,
In a lowly plain, or a lofty hill,
Make it among earth’s humblest graves,
But not in a land where men are slaves.” |
[Page 764]
In the
State of Maine the papers brought to her notice the capture of
Margaret Garner, and the tragic and bloody deed connected
therewith. And she writes:
“ Rome
had her altars where the trembling criminal, and the worn and weary
slave might fly for an asylum - Judea her cities of refuge;
but Ohio, with her Bibles and churches, her baptisms and prayers,
had not one temple so dedicated to human rights, one altar so
consecrated to human liberty, that trampled upon and down-trodden
innocence knew that it could find protection for a night, or shelter
for a day."
In the
fall of 1860, in the city of Cincinnati, Mrs. Harper
was married to Fenton Harper, a widower, and resident
of Ohio. It seemed obvious that this change would necessarily
take her from the sphere of her former usefulness. The means
she had saved from the sale of her books and from her lectures, she
invested in a small farm near Columbus, and in a short time after
her marriage she entered upon house-keeping.
Notwithstanding her family cares, consequent upon
married life, she only ceased from her literary and anti-slavery
labors, when compelled to do so by other duties.
On the 23d of May, 1864, death deprived her of her
husband.
Whilst she could not give so much attention to writing
as she could have desired in her household days, she, nevertheless,
did then produce some of her best productions. Take the
following for a sample, on the return from Cleveland, Ohio, of a
poor, ill-fated slave-girl, (under the Fugitive Slave Law):
TO THE UNION SAVERS 0F CLEVELAND.
Men of Cleveland, had a vulture
Sought a timid dove for prey,
Would you not, with human pity,
Drive the gory bird away?
Had you seen a feeble lambkin,
Shrinking from a wolf so bold,
Would ye not to shield the trembler,
In your arms have made its fold?
But when she, a hunted sister,
Stretched her hands that ye might save,
Colder far than Zembla's regions
Was the answer that; ye gave.
On the Union’s bloody altar,
Was your hapless victim laid;
Mercy, truth and justice shuddered,
But your hands would give no aid.
And ye sent her back to torture,
Robbed of freedom and of right.
Thrust the wretched, captive stranger.
Back to slavery’s gloomy night. |
[Page 765]
Back where brutal men may trample,
On her honor and her fame;
And unto her lips so dusky,
Press the cup of woe and shame.
There is blood upon your city,
Dark and dismal is the stain;
And your hands would fail to cleanse it,
Though Lake Erie ye should drain.
There’s a curse upon your Union,
Fearful sounds are in the air;
As if thunderbolts Were framing,
Answers to the bondsman's prayer.
Ye may offer human victims,
Like the heathen priests of old;
And may barter manly honor
For the Union and for gold.
But ye can not stay the whirlwind,
When the storm begins to break;
And our God doth rise in judgment,
For the poor and needy's sake.
And, your sin-cursed, guilty Union,
Shall be shaken to its base,
Till ye learn that simple justice,
Is the right of every race. |
Mrs. Harper took
the deepest interest in the war, and looked with extreme anxiety for
the results; and she never lost an opportunity to write, speak, or
serve the cause in any way that she thought would best promote the
freedom of the slave. On the proclamation of General
Fremont, the passages from her pen are worthy to be long
remembered:
“ Well,
what think you of the war? To me one of the most interesting
features is Fremont’s Proclamation freeing the slaves of the rebels.
Is there no ray of hope in that? I should not wonder if
Edward M. Davis breathed that into his ear. His
proclamation looks like real earnestness; no mincing the matter with
the rebels. Death to the traitors and confiscation of their
slaves is no child's play. I hope that the boldness of his
stand will inspire others to look the real cause of the war in the
face and inspire the government with uncompromising earnestness to
remove the festering curse. And yet I am not un easy about the
result of this war. We may look upon it as God’s
controversy with the nation; His arising to plead by fire and blood
the cause of His poor and needy people. Some time since
Breckinridge, in writing to Sumner, asks, if I rightly
remember, What is the fate of a few negroes to me or mine?
Bound up in one great bundle of humanity our fates seem linked
together, our destiny entwined with theirs, and our rights are
interwoven together."
Finally
when the long-looked-for Emancipation Proclamation came, although
Mrs. Harper was not at that time very well, she accepted an
invita-
[Page 766]
tion to address a public meeting in Columbus, Ohio, an allusion to
which we find in a letter dated at Grove City, O., which we copy
with the feeling that many who may read this volume will sympathize
with every word uttered relative to the Proclamation:
"I spoke
in Columbus on the President's Proclamation
* * But was not such
an event worthy the awakening of every power - the congratulation of
every faculty? What hath God wrought! We may well
exclaim how event after event has paved the way for freedom.
In the crucible of disaster and defeat God has stirred the
nation, and permitted no permanent victory to crown her banners
while she kept her hand upon the trembling slave and held him back
from freedom. And even now the scale may still seem to
oscillate between the contending parties, and some may say, Why does
not God give us full and quick victory? My friend, do
not despair if even deeper shadows gather around the fate of the
nation, that truth will not ultimately triumph, and the right he
established and vindicated; but the deadly gangrene has taken such
deep and almost fatal hold upon the nation that the very centres of
its life seem to be involved in its eradication. Just look,
after all the trials deep and fiery through which the nation has
waded, how mourn fully suggestive was the response the proclamation
received from the democratic triumphs which followed so close upon
its footsteps. Well, thank God that the President did
not fail us, that the fierce rumbling of democratic thunder did not
shake from his hand the bolt he leveled against slavery. Oh,
it would have been so sad if, after all the desolation and carnage
that have dyed our plains with blood and crimsoned our borders with
war fare, the pale young corpses trodden down by the hoofs of war,
the dim eyes that have looked their last upon the loved and lost,
had the arm of Executive power failed us in the nation’s fearful
crisis! For how mournful it is when the unrighted wrongs and
fearful agonies of ages reach their culminating point, and events
solemn, terrible and sublime marshal themselves in dread array to
mould the destiny of nations, the hands appointed to hold the helm
of affairs, instead of grasping the mighty occasions and stamping
them with the great seals of duty and right, permit them to float
along the current of circum stances without comprehending the hour
of visitation or the momentous day of opportunity. Yes, we may
thank God that in the hour when the nation’s life was
convulsed, and fearful gloom had shed its shadows over the land, the
President reached out his hand through the darkness to break the
chains on which the rust of centuries had gathered. Well, did
you ever expect to see this day? I know that all is not
accomplished; but we may rejoice in what has been already wrought, -
the wondrous change in so short a time. Just a little while
since the American flag to the flying bondman was an ensign of bond
age; now it has become a symbol of protection and freedom.
Once the slave was a despised and trampled on pariah; now he has
become a useful ally to the American government. From the
crimson sods of war springs the white flower of freedom, and songs
of deliverance mingle with the crash and roar of war. The
shadow of the American army becomes a covert for the slave, and
beneath the American Eagle he grasps the key of know ledge and is
lifted to a higher destiny."
This
letter we had intended should complete the sketch of Mrs.
Harper’s Anti-Slavery labors; but in turning to another epistle
dated Boston, April 19th, on the Assassination of the President, we
feel that a part of it is too interesting to omit:
“Sorrow
treads on the footsteps of the nation's joy. A few days since
the telegraph thrilled and throbbed with a nation’s joy.
To-day a nation sits down beneath the shadow
[Page 767]
of its monrnful grief. Oh, what a terrible lesson does this
event read to us! A few years since slavery tortured, burned,
hung and outraged us, and the nation passed by and said, they had
nothing to do with slavery where it was, slavery would have
something to do with them where they were. Oh, how fearfully
the judgments of Ichabod have pressed upon the nation’s life!
Well, it may be in the providence of God this blow was needed
to intensify the nation’s hatred of slavery, to show the utter
fallacy of basing national reconstruction upon the votes of returned
rebels, and rejecting loyal black men; making (after all the blood
poured out like water, and wealth scattered like chaff) a return to
the old idea that a white rebel is better or of more account in the
body politic than a loyal black man. *
* Moses, the meekest man on earth,
led the children of Israel over the Red Sea, but was not permitted
to see them settled in Canaan. Mr. Lincoln has
led up through another Red Sea to the table land of triumphant
victory, and God has seen fit to summon for the new era
another man. It is ours then to bow to the Chastener and let
our honored and loved chieftain go. Surely the everlasting
arms that have hushed him so strangely to sleep are able to guide
the nation through its untrod future; but in vain should be this
fearful baptism of blood if from the dark bosom of slavery springs
such terrible crimes. Let the whole nation resolve that the
whole virus shall be eliminated from its body; that in the future
slavery shall only be remembered as a thing of the past that shall
never have the faintest hope of a resurrection.”
Up to
this point, we have spoken of Mrs. Harper as a
laborer, battling for freedom under slavery and the war. She
is equally earnest in laboring for Equality before the law -
education, and a higher manhood, especially in the South, among the
Freedmen.
For the best part of several years, since the war, she
has traveled very extensively through the Southern States, going on
the plantations and amongst the lowly, as well as to the cities and
towns, addressing schools, Churches, meetings in Court Houses,
Legislative Halls, &c., and, sometimes, under the most trying and
hazardous circumstances; influenced in her labor of love, wholly by
the noble impulses of her own heart, working her way along
unsustained by any Society. In this mission, she has come in contact
with all classes - the original slaveholders and the Freedmen,
before and since the Fifteenth Amendment bill was enacted.
Excepting two of the Southern States (Texas and Arkansas), she has
traveled largely over all the others, and in no instance has she
permitted herself, through four, to disappoint an audience, when
engagements had been made for her to speak, although frequently
admonished that it would be dangerous to venture in so doing.
We first quote from a letter dated Darlington, S. C.,
May 13, 1867:
“You will see by this that I am in the sunny South.
* * *
I here read and see human nature under new lights and phases.
I meet with a people eager to hear, ready to listen, as if they felt
that the slumber of the ages had been broken, and that they were to
sleep no more. * *
* I am glad that the colored man gets his
freedom and suffrage together; that be is not forced to go through
the same condition of things here, that has inclined him so much to
apathy, isolation, and indifference, in the North. You, perhaps,
wonder why I have been so slow in writing to you, but if you knew
how busy I am, just working up to or past the limit of my strength.
Traveling, conversing, addressing day and Sunday-schools (picking up
scraps of information, takes up a large portion of my time),
[Page 768]
besides what I give to reading. For my audiences I have both
white and colored. On the cars, some find out that I am a
lecturer, and then, again, I am drawn into conversation. ‘What
are you lecturing about?’ the question comes up, and if I say, among
other topics politics, then I may look for an onset. There is
a sensitiveness on this subject, a dread, it may be, that some one
will ‘put the devil in the nigger’s head,’ or exert some influence
inimical to them; still, I get along somewhat pleasantly. Last
week I had a small congregation of listeners in the cars, where I
sat. I got in conversation with a former slave dealer, and we
had rather an exciting time. I was traveling alone, but it is not
worth while to show any signs of fear. *
* * Last Saturday I
spoke in Sumter; a number of white persons were present, and I had
been invited to speak there by the Mayor and editor of the paper.
There had been some violence in the district, and some of my friends
did not wish me to go, but I had promised, and, of course, I went.
* * *
* I am in Darlington, and spoke yesterday,
but my congregation was so large, that I stood near the door of the
church, so that I might be heard both inside and out, for a large
portion, perhaps nearly half my congregation were on the outside;
and this, in Darlington, where, about two years ago, a girl was hung
for making a childish and indiscreet speech. Victory was
perched on our banners. Our army had been through, and this
poor, ill-fated girl, almost a child in years, about seventeen years
of age, rejoiced over the event, and said that she was going to
marry a Yankee and set up housekeeping. She was reported as
having made an incendiary speech and arrested, cruelly scourged, and
then brutally hung. Poor child! she had been a faithful
servant - her master tried to save her, but the tide of fury swept
away his efforts. *
* * Oh, friend,
perhaps, sometimes your heart would ache, if you were only here and
heard of the wrongs and abuses to which these people have been
subjected. * *
* Things, I believe, are a little more
hopeful; at least, I believe, some of the colored people are getting
better contracts, and, I understand, that there's less murdering.
While I am writing, a colored man stands here, with a tale of wrong
- he has worked a whole year, year before last, and now he has been
put off with fifteen bushels of corn and his food; yesterday he went
to see about getting his money, and the person to whom he went,
threatened to kick him off, and accused him of stealing. I
don't know how the colored man will vote, but perhaps many of them
will be intimidated at the polls."
From a
letter dated Cheraw, June 175h, 1867, the following remarks are
taken:
"Well,
Carolina is an interesting place. There is not a state in the
Union I prefer to Carolina. Kinder, more hospitable,
warmer-hearted people perhaps you will not find anywhere. I
have been to Georgia; but Carolina is my preference.
* * The South is to
be a great theatre for the colored man's development and progress.
There is brain-power here. If any doubt it, let him come into
our schools, or even converse with some of our Freedmen either in
their homes or by the way-side."
A few
days later she gave an account of a visit she had just made in
Florence, where our poor soldiers had been prisoners; saw some of
the huts where they were exposed to rain and heat and cold with only
the temporary shelter they made for themselves, which was a sad
sight. Then she visited the grave-yards of some thousands of
Union soldiers. Here in “eastern South Carolina” she was in
“one of the worst parts of the State” in the days of Slavery; but
under the new order of things, instead of the lash, she saw school
books, and over the ruins of slavery, education and free speech
springing up, at which she was moved to exclaim, “Thank God for the
wonderful
[Page 769]
change! I have lectured several nights this week, and the
weather is quite warm; but I do like South Carolina. No state
in the Union as far as colored people are concerned, do I like
better - the land of warm welcomes and friendly hearts. God
bless her and give her great peace!
At a later period she visited Charleston and Columbia,
and was well received in both places. She spoke a number of
times in the different Freedmen schools and the colored churches in
Charleston, once in the Legislative Hall, and also in one of the
colored churches in Columbia. She received special
encouragement and kindness from Hon. H. Cadoza, Secretary of
State, and his family, and regarded him as a wise and upright leader
of his race in that state.
The following are some stirring lines which she wrote
upon the Fifteenth Amendment:
FIFTEENTH AMENDMENT.
Beneath the burden of our joy
Tremble, o wires, from East to West!
Fashion with words your tongues of fire,
To tell the nation’s high behest.
Outstrip the winds, and leave behind
The murmur of the restless waves;
Nor tarry with your glorious news,
Amid the ocean’s coral caves.
Ring out 1 ring out I your sweetest
chimes,
Ye bells, that call to praise;
Let every heart with gladness thrill,
And songs of joyful triumph raise.
Shake off the dust, O rising race!
Crowned as a brother and a man;
Justice to-day asserts her claim,
And from thy brow fades out the ban.
With freedom’s chrism upon thy head,
Her precious ensign in thy hand,
Go place thy once despised name
Amid the noblest of the land.
O ransomed race! give God the
praise,
Who led thee through a crimson sea,
And ’mid the storm of fire and blood,
Turned out the war-cloud‘s light to thee. |
Mrs.
Harper, in writing from Kingstree, S. C., July 11th, 1867, in
midsummer (laboring almost without any pecuniary reward), gave an
account of a fearful catastrophe which had just occurred there in
the burning of the jail with a number of colored prisoners in it.
"It was a very sad affair. There was only one white prisoner
and he got out. I believe
[Page 770]
there was some effort made to release some of the prisoners; but the
smoke was such that the effort proved ineffectual. Well, for
the credit of our common human nature we may hope that it was so.
* * *
Last night I had some of the ‘rebs’ to hear me (part of the time
some of the white folks come out). Our meetings are just as
quiet and as orderly on the whole in Carolina as one might desire.
* * I like
General Sickles as a Military Governor. ‘Massa
Daniel, he King of the Carolinas.’ I like his
Mastership. Under him we ride in the City Cars, and get
first-class passage on the railroad.” At this place a colored
man was in prison under sentence of death for “participating in a
riot;” and the next day (after the date of her letter) was fixed for
his execution. With some others, Mrs. Harper
called at General Sickles’ Head Quarters, hoping to
elicit his sympathies whereby the poor fellow’s life might be saved;
but he was not in. Hence they were not able to do anything.
“Next week,” continued Mrs. Harper, “I am
to speak in a place where one of our teachers was struck and a
colored man shot, who, I believe, gave offence by some words spoken
at a public meeting. I do not feel any particular fear.”
Her Philadelphia correspondent had jestiugly suggested
to her in one of his letters, that she should be careful not to
allow herself to be “bought by the rebels.” To which she
replied:
“Now, in reference to being bought by rebels and
becoming a Johnsonite I hold that between the white people and the
colored there is a community of interests, and the sooner they find
it out, the better it will be for both parties; but that community
of interests does not consist in increasing the privileges of one
class and curtailing the rights of the other, but in getting every
citizen interested in the welfare, progress and durability of the
state. I do not in lecturing confine myself to the political
side of the question. While I am in favor of Universal
suffrage, yet 1 know that the colored man needs something more than
a vote in his hand: he needs to know the value of a home life; to
rightly appreciate and value the marriage relation; to know how and
to be incited to leave behind him the old shards and shells of
slavery and to rise in the scale of character, wealth and influence.
Like the Nautilus outgrowing his home to build for himself more
‘stately temples’ of social condition. A. man landless,
ignorant and poor may use the vote against his interests; but with
intelligence and land he holds in his hand the basis of power and
elements of strength.”
While contemplating the great demand for laborers, in a
letter from Athens, February 1st, 1870, after referring to some who
had been “discourage i from the field,” she wisely added that it was
“no time to be discouraged.
* * If those who can
benefit our people will hang around places where they are not
needed, they may expect to be discouraged. *
* Here is ignorance to be instructed; a race
who needs to be helped up to higher planes of thought and action;
and whether we are hindered or helped, we should try to be true to
the commission God has written upon our souls. As far
as the colored people are concerned, they are beginning to get homes
for themselves and depositing money in Bank. They have
hundreds of homes in Kentucky. There is progress in Tennessee,
and even in this State while a number have been leaving, some who
stay seem to be getting along prosperously. In Augusta colored
persons are m the Revenue Office and Post Office. I have just
been having some good meetings there. Some of my meet
[Page 772]
From
Columbiana, February 20th, she wrote concerning her work, and
presented the “lights and shades ” of affairs as they came under her
notice.
“I am
almost constantly either traveling or speaking. I do not think
that I have missed more than one Sunday that I have not addressed
some Sunday-school, and I have not missed many day-schools either.
And as I am giving all my lectures free the proceeds of the
collections are not often very large; still as ignorant as part of
the people are perhaps a number of them would not hear at all, and
may be prejudice others if I charged even ten cents, and so perhaps
in the long run, even if my work is wearing, I may be of some real
benefit to my race. *
* I don’t know but that you would laugh if
you were to hear some of the remarks which my lectures call forth:
‘She is a man,’ again ‘She is not colored, she is painted.’
Both white and colored come out to hear me, and I have very fine
meetings; and then part of the time I am talking in between times,
and how tired I am some of the time. Still I am standing with my
race on the thresh old of a new era, and though some be far past me
in the learning of the schools, yet to-day, with my limited and
fragmentary knowledge, I may help the race forward a little.
Some of our people remind me of sheep without a shepherd.”
PRIVATE LECTURES TO FREEDWOMEN.
Desiring
to speak to women who have been the objects of so much wrong and
abuse under Slavery, and even since Emancipation, in a state of
ignorance, not accessible always to those who would or could urge
the proper kind of education respecting their morals and general
improvement, Mrs. Harper has made it her business not to
overlook this all important duty to her poor sisters.
The following extract taken from a letter dated
"Greenville, Georgia, March 29th," will show what she is doing in
this direction:
"But
really my hands are almost constantly full of work; sometimes I
speak twice a day. Part of my lectures are given privately to
women, and for them I never make any charge, or take up any
collection. But this part of the country reminds me of heathen
ground, and though my work may not be recognized as part of it used
to be in the North, yet never perhaps were my services more needed;
and according to their intelligence and means perhaps never better
appreciated than here among those lowly people. I am now going
to have a private meeting with the women of this place if they will
come out. I am going to talk with them about their daughters,
and about things connected with the welfare of the race. Now
is the time for our women to begin to try to lift up their heads and
plant the roots of progress under the hearthstone. Last night
I spoke in a school-house, where there was not, to my knowledge, a
single window glass; to-day I write to you in a lowly cabin, where
the windows in the room are formed by two apertures in the wall.
There is a wide-spread and almost universal appearance of poverty in
this State where I have been, but thus far I have seen no, or
scarcely any, pauperism. I am not sure that I have seen any.
The climate is so fine, so little cold that poor people ran live off
of less than they can in the North. Last night my table was
adorned with roses. although I did not get (me cent for my lecture.
* * *
*
“The political heavens are getting somewhat overcast.
Some of this old rebel element, I think, are in favor of taking away
the colored man’s vote, and if he loses it now it may be generations
before he gets it again. Well, after all perhaps the colored
man generally is not really developed enough to value his vote and
equality with other races, so he gets enough to eat and drink, and
be comfortable, perhaps the loss of his vote would
[Page 773]
not be a serious grievance to many ; but his children differently
educated and trained by circumstances might feel political
inferiority rather a bitter cup.”
“After all whether they encourage or discourage me, I
belong to this race, and when it is down I belong to a down race;
when it is up I belong to a risen race.”
She
writes thus from Montgomery, December 29th, 1870:
“ Did you ever read a little poem commencing, I think,
with these words:
A mother cried, Oh, give me joy,
For I have born a darling boy!
A darling boy I why the world is full
Of the men who play at push and pull. |
Well, as
full as the room was of beds and tenants, on the morning of the
twenty-second, there arose a wail upon the air, and this mundane
sphere had another inhabitant, and my room another occupant. I
left after that, and when I came back the house was fuller than it
was before, and my hostess gave me to understand that she would
rather I should be somewhere else, and I left again. How did I
fare? Well, I had been stopping with one of our teachers and
went back; but the room in which I stopped was one of those southern
shells through which both light and cold enter at the same time; it
had one window and perhaps more than half or one half the panes
gone. I don’t know that I was ever more conquered by the cold than I
had been at that house, and I have lived parts of winter after
winter amid the snows of New England; but if it was cold out of
doors, there was warmth and light within doors; but here, if you
opened the door for light, the cold would also enter, and so part of
the time I sat by the fire, and that and the crevices in the house
supplied me with light in one room, and we had the deficient
window-sash, or perhaps it never had had any lights in it. You
could put your finger through some of the apertures in the house; at
least I could mine, and the water froze down to the bottom of the
tumbler. From another such domicile may kind fate save me.
And then the man asked me four dollars and a half a week board.
One of the nights there was no fire in the stove, and
the next time we had fires, one stove might have been a second-hand
chamber stove. Now perhaps you think these people very poor,
but the man with whom I stopped has no family that I saw, but
himself and wife, and he would make two dollars and a half a day,
and she worked out and kept a boarder. And yet, except the
beds and bed clothing, I wouldn’t have given fifteen dollars for all
their house furniture. I should think that this has been one
of the lowest down States in the South, as far as civilization has
been concerned. In the future, until these people are
educated, look out for Democratic victories, for here are two
materials with which Democracy can work, ignorance and poverty.
Men talk about missionary work among the heathen, but if any lover
of Christ wants a field for civilizing work, here is a field.
Part of the time I am preaching against men ill-treating their
wives. I have heard though, that often during the war men hired out
their wives and drew their pay.
* *
* * *
* * *
* *
“And then
there is another trouble, some of our Northern men have been down
this way and by some means they have not made the best impression on
every mind here. One woman here has been expressing her mind
very freely to me about some of our Northerners, and we are not all
considered here as saints and angels, and of course in their minds I
get associated with some or all the humbugs that have been before
me. But I am not discouraged, my race needs me, if I will only
be faithful, and in spite of suspicion and distrust, I will work on;
the deeper our degradation, the louder our call for redemption.
If they have little or no faith in goodness and earnestness, that is
only one reason why we should be more faithful and earnest, and so I
shall probably stay here in the South all winter. I am not
making much money, and perhaps will hardly clear ex-
[Page 774]
penses this winter; but
after all what matters it when I am in my grave whether I have been
rich or poor, loved or hated, despised or respected, if Christ will
only own me to His Father, and I be permitted a place in one of the
mansions of rest.”
Col.
J. W. Forney, editor of "The Press," published July 12, 1871,
with the brief editorial heading by his own hand, the document
appended:
The
following letter, written by Mrs. F. E. W. Harper, the
well-known colored orator, to a friend, Mr. Wm. Still, of
Philadelphia, will be read with surprise and pleasure by all
classes; especially supplemented as it is by an article from the
Mobile (Alabama) Register, referring to one of her addresses
in that city. The Register is the organ of the
fire-eaters of the South, conducted by John Forsyth
heretofore one of the most intolerant of that of the South,
conducted by John Forsyth, heretofore one of the most
intolerant of that school. Mrs. Harper describes
the manner in which the old plantation of Jefferson Davis
in Mississippi was cultivated by his brother’s former slave, having
been a guest in the Davis mansion, now occupied by Mr.
Montgomery, the aforesaid slave. She also draws a
graphic picture of her own marvellous advancement from utter
obscurity to the plat form of a public lecturer. honored by her own
race and applauded by their oppressors. While we regret, as
she says, that her experience and that of Mr. Montgomery
is exceptional, it is easy to anticipate the harvest of such a
sewing. The same culture - the same courage on the part of the
men and women who undertake to advocate Republican doc trines in the
South - the same perseverance and intelligence on the part of those
who are earning their bread by the cultivation of the soil, will be
crowned with the same success. Violence, bloodshed, and murder
cannot rule long in communities where these resistless elements are
allowed to work. No scene in the unparalleled tragedy of the
rebellion, or in the drama which succeeded that tragedy, can be
compared to the picture outlined by Mrs. Harper
herself, and filled in by the ready pen of the rebel editor of the
Mobile Register:
MOBILE, July 5, 1871.
MY DEAR
FRIEND: - It is said that truth is stranger than fiction; and if ten
years since some one had entered my humble log house and seen me
kneading bread and making butter, and said that in less than ten
years you will be in the lecture field, you will be a welcome guest
under the roof of the President of the Confederacy, though not by
special invitation from him, that you will see his brother's former
slave a man of business and influence, that hundreds of colored men
will congregate on the old baronial possessions, that a school will
spring up there like a well in the desert dust, that this former
slave will be a magistrate upon that plantation, that labor will be
organized upon a new basis, and that under the sole auspices and
moulding hands of this man and his sons will be developed a business
whose transactions will be numbered in hundreds of thousands of
dollars, would you not have smiled incredulously? And I have
lived to see the day when the plantation has passed into new hands,
and these hands once wore the fetters of slavery. Mr.
Montgomery, the present proprietor by contract of between five
and six thousand acres of land, has one of the most interesting
families that I have ever seen in the South. They are building
up a future which if exceptional now I hope will become more general
hereafter. Every hand of his family is adding its quota to the
success of this experiment of a colored man both trading and farming
on an extensive scale. Last year his wife took on her
hands about 130 acres of land, and with her force she raised about
10 bales of cotton. She has a number of orphan children
employed, and not only does she supervise their labor, but she works
herself. One daughter, an intelligent young lady, is
postmistress and I believe assistant book-keeper. One son
attends to the planting interest, and another daughter attends to
one of the stores. The business of is firm of Montgomery &
Sons has amounted, I understand, to between three and four
hundred thousand dollars in a year. I stayed on the place
several days and was hospitably entertained and kindly
[Page 775]
treated. When I come, if nothing prevents, I will tell you
more about them. Now for the next strange truth Enclosed
I send you a notice from one of the leading and representative
papers of rebeldom. The editor has been, or is considered, one
of the representative men of the South. I have given a lecture since
this notice, which brought out some of the most noted rebels, among
whom was Admiral Semmes. In my speech I referred
to the Alabama sweeping away our comm ce, and his son
sat near him and seemed to receive it with much good humor. I
don’t know what the papers will say to-day; perhaps they will think
that I dwelt upon the past too much. Oh, if you had seen the
tabs I had out last night, perhaps you would have felt a little
nervous for me. However, I lived through it, and gave them
more gospel truth than perhaps some of them have heard for some
time.
A LECTURE
We
received a polite invitation from the trustees of the State-street
African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church to attend a lecture in that
edifice on Thursday evening. Being told that the discourse
would be delivered by a female colored lecturer from Maryland,
curiosity, as well as an interest to see how the colored citizens
were managing their own institutions, led us at once to accept the
invitation. We found a very spacious church, gas-light, and
the balustrades of the galleries copiously hung with wreaths and
festoons of flowers, and a large audience of both sexes, which, both
in appearance and behaviour, was respectable and decorously
observant of the proprieties of the place. The services were
opened, as usual, with prayer and a hymn, the latter inspired by
powerful lungs and in which the musical ear at once caught the negro
talent for melody. The lecturer was then introduced as Mrs.
F. E. W. Harper, from Maryland. Without a moment’s
hesitation she started off in the flow of her discourse, which
rolled smoothly and uninterruptedly on for nearly two hours.
It was very apparent that it was not a cut and dried speech, for she
was as fluent and as felicitous in her allusions to circumstances
immediately around her as she was when she rose to a more exalted
pitch of laudation of the “Union,” or of execration of the old
slavery system. Her voice was remarkable - as sweet as any
woman’s voice we ever heard, and so clear and distinct as to pass
every syllable to the meet distant ear in the house.
Without any effort at attentive listening we followed
the speaker to the end, not discerning a single grammatical
inaccuracy of speech, or the slightest violation of good taste in
manner or matter. At times the current of thoughts flowed in
eloquent and poetic expression, and often her quaint humor would
expose the ivory in half a thousand mouths. We confess
that we began to wonder, and we asked a fine-looking man before us,
“What is her color? Is she dark or light?" He answered,
“She is mulatto; what they call a red mulatto." The ‘red’ was
new to us. Our neighbor asked, “How do you like her?”
‘We replied, “She is giving your people the best kind and the very
wisest of advice.” He rejoined, “I wish I had her education."
To which we added, “That's just what she tells you is your great
duty and your need, and if you are too old to get it yourselves, you
must give it to your children.”
The speaker left the impression on our mind that she
was not only intelligent and educated, but - the great end of
education - she was enlightened. She comprehends perfectly the
situation of her people, to whose interests she seems ardently
devoted. The main theme of her discourse, the one string to
the harmony of which all the others were at tuned, was the grand
opportunity that emancipation had afforded to the black race to lift
itself to the level of the duties and responsibilities enjoined by
it. "You have muscle power and brain power,” she said; “you
must utilize them, or be content to remain for ever the inferior
race. Get land, every one that can, and as fast as you can. A
landless people must be dependent upon the landed people. A
few acres to till for food and a roof, however humble, over your
head, are the castle of your independence, and when you have
[Page 776]
it you are fortified to act and vote independently whenever your
interests are at stake." That part of her lecture (and there
was much of it) that dwelt on the moral duties and domestic
relations of the colored people was pitched on the highest key of
sound morality. She urged the cultivation of the “home life,”
the sanctity of the marriage state (a happy contrast to her
strong-minded, free-love, white sisters of the North), and the
duties of mothers to their daughters. “Why,” said she in a
voice of much surprise," I have so actually heard since I have
been South that sometimes colored husbands positively beat their
wives! I do not mean to insinuate for a moment that such
things can possibly happen in Mobile. The very appearance of
this congregation forbids it; but I did hear of one terrible husband
defending himself for the unmanly practice with “Well, I have got to
whip her or leave her.”
There were parts of the lecturer's discourse that
grated a little on a white Southern ear, but it was lost and
forgiven in the genuine earnestness and profound good sense with
which the woman spoke to her kind in words of sound advice.
On the whole, we are very glad we accepted the Zion's
invitation. It gave us much food for new thought. It
reminded us, perhaps of neglected duties to these people, and food
for new thought. It reminded us, perhaps, of neglected duties
to these people, and it impressed strongly on our minds that these
people are getting along, getting onward, and progress was a star
becoming familiar to their gaze and their desires. Whatever
the negroes have done with the path of advancement, they have done
largely without white aid. But politics and white pride have
kept the white people aloof from offering that earnest and moral
assistance which would be so useful to a people just starting from
infancy into a life of self-dependence.
In writing from
Columbiana and Demopolis, Alabama, about the first of March, 1871,
Mrs. Harper painted the state of affairs in her
usually graphic manner, and diligently was she endeavoring to
inspire the people with hope and encouragement.
“ Oh,
what a field there is herein this region! Let me give you a
short account of this week’s work. Sunday I addressed a
Sunday-school in Taladega; on Monday afternoon a day-school.
On Monday I rode several miles to a meeting; addressed it, and came
back the same night. Got back about or after twelve o’clock.
The next day I had a meeting of women and addressed them, and then
lectured in the evening in the Court House to both colored and
white. Last night I spoke again, about ten miles from where I
am now stopping, and returned the same night, and to-morrow evening
probably I shall speak again. I grow quite tired part of the
time. * *
* And now let me give you an anecdote or two
of some of our new citizens. While in Taladega I was
entertained and well entertained, at the house of one of our new
citizens. He is living in the house of his former master.
He is a brick-maker by trade, and I rather think mason also.
He was worth to his owner, it was reckoned, fifteen hundred or about
that a year. He worked with him seven years; and in that seven
years he remembers receiving from him fifty cents. Now mark
the contrast! That man is now free, owns the home of his former
master, has I think more than sixty acres of land, and his master is
in the poor-house. I heard of another such case not long
since: A woman was cruelly treated once, or more than once.
She escaped and ran naked into town. The villain in whose
clutch she found herself was trying to drag her downward to his own
low level of impurity, and at last she fell. She was poorly
fed, so that she was tempted to sell her person. Even scraps
thrown to the dog she was hunger-bitten enough to aim for.
Poor thing; was there anything in the future for her? Had not
hunger and cruelty and prostitution done their work, and left her an
entire wreck for life? It seems not. Freedom came, and
with it dawned a new era upon that poor, overshadowed, and
sin-darkened life. Freedom brought oppor- [Page 777]
tunity for work and wages combined. She went to
work, and got ten dollars a month. She has contrived to get
some education, and has since been teaching school. While her
former mistress has been to her for help.
“ Do not the mills of God
grind exceedingly fine? And she has helped that
mistress, and so has the colored man given money, from
what I heard, to his former master. After all,
friend, do we not belong to one of the best branches of
the human race? And yet, how have our people been
murdered in the South, and their bones scattered at the
grave’s mouth! Oh, when will we have a government
strong enough to make human life safe? Only
yesterday I heard of a murder committed on a man for an
old grudge of several years’ standing. I had
visited the place, but had just got away.
Last summer a Mr. Luke was hung, and
several other men also, I heard.”
While surrounded with this
state of affairs, an appeal reached her through the
columns of the National Standard, setting forth a state
of very great suffering and want, especially on the part
of the old, blind and decrepit Freedmen of the District
of Columbia. After expressing deep pity for these
unfortunates, she added: “ Please send ten dollars to
Josephine Grifting for me for the suffering
poor of the District of Columbia. Just send it by
mail, and charge to my account.”
Many more letters written by Mrs. Harper
are before us, containing highly interesting information
from Louisiana, Mississippi, Florida, North Carolina,
Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee, Missouri, Maryland, and
even poor little Delaware. Through all these
States she has traveled and labored extensively, as has
been already stated; but our space in this volume will
admit of only one more letter:
"I have been
traveling the best part of the day. * * Can you spare a
little time from your book to just take a peep at some
of our Alabama people? If you would see some
instances of apparent poverty and ignorance that I have
seen perhaps you would not wonder very much at the
conservative voting in the State. A few days since
I was about to pay a woman a dollar and a quarter for
some washing in ten cent (currency) notes, when she
informed me that she could not count it; she must trust
to my honesty—she con d count forty cents. Since I
left Eufaula I have seen something of plantation life.
The first plantation I visited was about five or six
miles from Eufaula, and I should think that the
improvement in some of the cabins was not very much in
advance of what it was in Slavery. The cabins are
made with doors, but not, to my recollection, a single
window pane or speck of plastering; and yet even in some
of those lowly homes I met with hospitality. A
room to myself is a luxury that I do not always enjoy.
Still I live through it, and find life rather
interesting. The people have much to learn.
The condition of the women is not very enviable in some
cases. They have had some of them a terribly hard
time in Slavery, and their subjection has not ceased in
freedom. * * One man said of some women, that a
man must leave them or whip them. * * Let me
introduce you to another scene: here is a gathering; a
large fire is burning out of doors, and here are one or
two boys with hats on. Here is a little girl with
her bonnet on, and there a little boy moves off and
commences to climb a tree. Do you know what the
gathering means? It is a school, and the teacher,
I believe, is paid from the school fund. He says
he is from New Hampshire. That may be. But
to look at him and to hear him teach, you would perhaps
think him not very lately from the North; at least I do
not think he is a model teacher. They have a
church; but somehow they have burnt a hole, I
understand, in the top, and so I lectured inside, and
they gathered around the fire outside. Here in
[Page 778]
another - what shall I call it? - meeting-place.
It is a brush arbor. And what pray is that?
Shall I call it an edifice or an improvised
meeting-house? Well, it is called a brush arbor.
It is a kind of brush house with seats, and a kind of
covering made partly, I rather think, of branches of
trees, and a humble place for pulpit. I lectured
in a place where they seemed to have no other church;
but I spoke at a house. In Glenville, a little
out-of-the-way place, I spent part of a week.
There they have two unfinished churches. One has
not a single pane of glass, and the same aperture that
admits the light also gives ingress to the air; and the
other one, I rather think, is less finished than that.
I spoke in one, and then the white people gave me a
hall, and quite a number attended. *
* * I am now at Union Springs,
where I shall probably room with three women. But
amid all this roughing it in the bush, I find a field of
work where kindness and hospitality have thrown their
sunshine around my way. And Oh what a field of
work is here! How much one needs the Spirit of our
dear Master to make one's life a living, loving force to
help men to higher planes of thought and action. I
am giving all my lectures with free admission; but still
I get along, and the way has been opening for me almost
ever since I have been South. Oh, if some more of
our young women would only consecrate their lives to the
work of upbuilding the race! Oh, if I could only
see our young men and women aiming to build up a future
for themselves which would grandly contrast with the
past - with its pain, ignorance and low social
condition. It may
be well to add that Mrs. Harper's letters from which we have
copied were simply private, never intended for publication,; and
while they bear obvious marks of truthfulness, discrimination and
impartiality, it becomes us to say that a more strictly
conscientious
woman we have never known.
Returning to Philadelphia after many months of hard
labor in the South, Mrs. Harper, instead of seeking needed
rest and recreation, scarcely allows a day to pass without seeking
to aid in the reformation of the outcast and degraded. The
earnest advice which she gives on the subject of temperance and
moral reforms generally causes some to reflect, even among adults
and induces a number of poor children to attend day and
Sabbath-schools. The condition of this class, she feels,
appeals loudly for a remedy to respectable and intelligent colored
citizens; and whilst not discouraged, she is often quite saddened at
the supineness of the better class. During the past summer
when it was too warm to labor in the South she spent several months
in this field without a farthing's reward. She assisted in
organizing a Sabbath-school, and accepted the office of Assistant
Superintendent under the auspices of the Young Men's Christian
Association.
Mrs. Harper reads the best magazines and ablest
weeklies, as well as more elaborate works, not excepting such
authors as De Tocqueville, Mill, Ruskin, Buckle, Guizot, &c.
In espousing the cause of the oppressed as a poet and lecturer, had
she neglected to fortify her mind in the manner she did, she would
have been weighed and found wanting long since. Before friends
and foes, the learned and the unlearned, North and South, Mrs.
Harper
has pleaded the cause of her race in a manner
that has commanded the greatest respect; indeed, it is hardly too
much to say, that during [Page 779]
seventeen years of public labor she has made thousands
of speeches without doing herself or people discredit in a single
instance, but has accomplished a great deal in the way of removing
prejudice. May we not hope that the rising generation at least
will take encouragement by her example and find an argument of rare
force in favor of mental and moral equality, and above all be
awakened to see how prejudices and difficulties may be surmounted by
continual struggles, intelligence and a virtuous character?
Fifty thousand copies at least of her four small books
have been sold to those who have listened to her eloquent lectures.
One of those productions entitled "Moses" has been used to entertain
audiences with evening readings in various parts of the country.
With what effect may be seen from the two brief notices as follows:
"Mrs. F. E. W. Harper
delivered a poem upon 'Moses' in Wilbraham to a large and
delighted audience. She is a woman of high moral tone, with
superior native powers highly cultivated, and a captivating
eloquence that hold her audience in rapt attention from the
beginning to the close. She will delight any intelligent
audience, and those who wish first-class lecturers cannot do better
than to secure her services." - Zion's Herald, Boston.
Mrs. Frances E. W. Harper read her poem of 'Moses'
last evening at Rev. Mr. Harrison's
church to a good audience. It deals with
the story of the Hebrew Mosesi from his finding in the wicker
basket on the Nile to his death on Mount Nebo and his burial in an
unknown grave; following closely the Scripture account. It
contains about 700 lines, beginning with blank verse of the common
measure, and changing to other measures, but always without rhyme;
and is a pathetic and well-sustained piece.
Mrs. Harper recited it with good effect, and
it was well received. She is a lady of much talent, and always
speaks well, particularly when her subject relates to the condition
of her own people, in whose welfare, before and since the war, she
has taken the deepest interest. As a lecturer Mrs. Harper
is more effective than most of those who come before our lyceums;
with a natural eloquence that is very moving." -
Galesburg Register, Ill.
Grace
Greenwood, in the independent in noticing a
Course of Lectures in which Mrs. Harper
spoke (in Philadelphia) pays this tribute to
her:
"Next on
the course was Mrs. Harper, a colored
woman; about as colored as some of the Cuban
belles I have met with at Saratoga. She
has a noble head, this bronze muse; a strong
face, with a shadowed glow upon it, indicative
of thoughtful fervor, and of a nature most
femininely sensitive, but not in the least
morbid. Her for is delicate, her hands
daintily small. She stands quietly beside
her desk, and speaks without notes, with
gestures few and fitting. Her manner is
marked by dignity and composure. She is
never assuming, never theatrical. In the
first part of her lecture she was most
impressive in her pleading for the race with
whom her lot is cast. There was something
touching in her attitude as their
representative. The woe of two hundred
years sighed through her tones. Every
glance of her sad eyes was a mournful
remonstrance against injustice and wrong.
Feeling on her soul, as she must have felt it,
the chilling weight of caste, she seemed to say:
|
'I lift my heavy
heart up solemnly,
As once Electra her sepulchral urn.' |
|
* *
* As I listened to her, there
swept over me, in a chill wave of horror, the reali-
[Page 780]
zation that this noble woman had she not been rescued
from her mother's condition, might have been sold on the
auction-block, to the highest bidder - her intellect,
fancy, eloquence, the flashing wit, that might make the
delight of a Parisian saloon, and her pure, Christian
character all thrown in - the recollection that women
like her could be dragged out of public conveyance in
our own city, or frowned out of fashionable churches by
Anglo-Saxon saints."
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