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- Douglass, Frederick. "My Escape from Slavery."
- The Century Illustrated Magazine 23, n.s. 1 (Nov. 1881): 125-131.
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-
-
- MY ESCAPE FROM SLAVERY
-
-
- In the first narrative of my experience in slavery, written nearly
- forty years ago, and in various writings since, I have given
- the public what I considered very good reasons for withholding
- the manner of my escape. In substance these reasons were, first,
- that such publication at any time during the existence of slavery
- might be used by the master against the slave, and prevent
- the future escape of any who might adopt the same means that I did.
- The second reason was, if possible, still more binding to silence:
- the publication of details would certainly have put in peril
- the persons and property of those who assisted. Murder itself was
- not more sternly and certainly punished in the State of Maryland
- than that of aiding and abetting the escape of a slave.
- Many colored men, for no other crime than that of giving aid to
- a fugitive slave, have, like Charles T. Torrey, perished in prison.
- The abolition of slavery in my native State and throughout the country,
- and the lapse of time, render the caution hitherto observed
- no longer necessary. But even since the abolition of slavery,
- I have sometimes thought it well enough to baffle curiosity
- by saying that while slavery existed there were good reasons
- for not telling the manner of my escape, and since slavery
- had ceased to exist, there was no reason for telling it.
- I shall now, however, cease to avail myself of this formula, and,
- as far as I can, endeavor to satisfy this very natural curiosity.
- I should, perhaps, have yielded to that feeling sooner, had there been
- anything very heroic or thrilling in the incidents connected with
- my escape, for I am sorry to say I have nothing of that sort to
- tell; and yet the courage that could risk betrayal and the bravery
- which was ready to encounter death, if need be, in pursuit of
- freedom, were essential features in the undertaking. My success
- was due to address rather than courage, to good luck rather than
- bravery. My means of escape were provided for me by the very men
- who were making laws to hold and bind me more securely in slavery.
-
- It was the custom in the State of Maryland to require the free
- colored people to have what were called free papers.
- These instruments they were required to renew very often,
- and by charging a fee for this writing, considerable sums from
- time to time were collected by the State. In these papers the name,
- age, color, height, and form of the freeman were described,
- together with any scars or other marks upon his person which
- could assist in his identification. This device in some measure
- defeated itself--since more than one man could be found to answer
- the same general description. Hence many slaves could escape
- by personating the owner of one set of papers; and this was often done
- as follows: A slave, nearly or sufficiently answering the description
- set forth in the papers, would borrow or hire them till by means of them
- he could escape to a free State, and then, by mail or otherwise,
- would return them to the owner. The operation was a hazardous one for
- the lender as well as for the borrower. A failure on the part of
- the fugitive to send back the papers would imperil his benefactor,
- and the discovery of the papers in possession of the wrong man
- would imperil both the fugitive and his friend. It was, therefore,
- an act of supreme trust on the part of a freeman of color thus to
- put in jeopardy his own liberty that another might be free. It was,
- however, not unfrequently bravely done, and was seldom discovered.
- I was not so fortunate as to resemble any of my free acquaintances
- sufficiently to answer the description of their papers.
- But I had a friend--a sailor--who owned a sailor's protection,
- which answered somewhat the purpose of free papers--describing his person,
- and certifying to the fact that he was a free American sailor.
- The instrument had at its head the American eagle, which gave
- it the appearance at once of an authorized document.
- This protection, when in my hands, did not describe
- its bearer very accurately. Indeed, it called for a man
- much darker than myself, and close examination of it would
- have caused my arrest at the start.
-
- In order to avoid this fatal scrutiny on the part of railroad
- officials, I arranged with Isaac Rolls, a Baltimore hackman,
- to bring my baggage to the Philadelphia train just on the moment
- of starting, and jumped upon the car myself when the train was in motion.
- Had I gone into the station and offered to purchase a ticket,
- I should have been instantly and carefully examined, and undoubtedly arrested.
- In choosing this plan I considered the jostle of the train, and the natural
- haste of the conductor, in a train crowded with passengers, and relied upon
- my skill and address in playing the sailor, as described in my protection,
- to do the rest. One element in my favor was the kind feeling which prevailed
- in Baltimore and other sea-ports at the time, toward "those who go down
- to the sea in ships." "Free trade and sailors' rights" just then expressed
- the sentiment of the country. In my clothing I was rigged out in sailor style.
- I had on a red shirt and a tarpaulin hat, and a black cravat tied
- in sailor fashion carelessly and loosely about my neck. My knowledge
- of ships and sailor's talk came much to my assistance, for I knew a ship
- from stem to stern, and from keelson to cross-trees, and could talk sailor
- like an "old salt." I was well on the way to Havre de Grace before
- the conductor came into the negro car to collect tickets and examine
- the papers of his black passengers. This was a critical moment in the drama.
- My whole future depended upon the decision of this conductor.
- Agitated though I was while this ceremony was proceeding, still,
- externally, at least, I was apparently calm and self-possessed.
- He went on with his duty--examining several colored passengers
- before reaching me. He was somewhat harsh in tome and peremptory
- in manner until he reached me, when, strange enough, and to my surprise
- and relief, his whole manner changed. Seeing that I did not readily
- produce my free papers, as the other colored persons in the car had done,
- he said to me, in friendly contrast with his bearing toward the others:
-
- "I suppose you have your free papers?"
-
- To which I answered:
-
- "No sir; I never carry my free papers to sea with me."
-
- "But you have something to show that you are a freeman, haven't you?"
-
- "Yes, sir," I answered; "I have a paper with the American Eagle on it,
- and that will carry me around the world."
-
- With this I drew from my deep sailor's pocket my seaman's protection,
- as before described. The merest glance at the paper satisfied him,
- and he took my fare and went on about his business. This moment
- of time was one of the most anxious I ever experienced.
- Had the conductor looked closely at the paper, he could not
- have failed to discover that it called for a very different-looking
- person from myself, and in that case it would have been his duty
- to arrest me on the instant, and send me back to Baltimore
- from the first station. When he left me with the assurance
- that I was all right, though much relieved, I realized that
- I was still in great danger: I was still in Maryland,
- and subject to arrest at any moment. I saw on the train
- several persons who would have known me in any other clothes,
- and I feared they might recognize me, even in my sailor "rig,"
- and report me to the conductor, who would then subject me
- to a closer examination, which I knew well would be fatal to me.
-
- Though I was not a murderer fleeing from justice, I felt perhaps
- quite as miserable as such a criminal. The train was moving
- at a very high rate of speed for that epoch of railroad travel,
- but to my anxious mind it was moving far too slowly. Minutes were hours,
- and hours were days during this part of my flight. After Maryland,
- I was to pass through Delaware--another slave State, where slave-catchers
- generally awaited their prey, for it was not in the interior of the State,
- but on its borders, that these human hounds were most vigilant and active.
- The border lines between slavery and freedom were the dangerous ones
- for the fugitives. The heart of no fox or deer, with hungry hounds
- on his trail in full chase, could have beaten more anxiously or noisily
- than did mine from the time I left Baltimore till I reached Philadelphia.
- The passage of the Susquehanna River at Havre de Grace was at that time
- made by ferry-boat, on board of which I met a young colored man by the name
- of Nichols, who came very near betraying me. He was a "hand" on the boat,
- but, instead of minding his business, he insisted upon knowing me,
- and asking me dangerous questions as to where I was going,
- when I was coming back, etc. I got away from my old and inconvenient
- acquaintance as soon as I could decently do so, and went to another part
- of the boat. Once across the river, I encountered a new danger.
- Only a few days before, I had been at work on a revenue cutter,
- in Mr. Price's ship-yard in Baltimore, under the care of Captain McGowan.
- On the meeting at this point of the two trains, the one going
- south stopped on the track just opposite to the one going north,
- and it so happened that this Captain McGowan sat at a window where
- he could see me very distinctly, and would certainly have recognized
- me had he looked at me but for a second. Fortunately, in the hurry
- of the moment, he did not see me; and the trains soon passed each
- other on their respective ways. But this was not my only hair-
- breadth escape. A German blacksmith whom I knew well was on the
- train with me, and looked at me very intently, as if he thought
- he had seen me somewhere before in his travels. I really
- believe he knew me, but had no heart to betray me. At any rate,
- he saw me escaping and held his peace.
-
- The last point of imminent danger, and the one I dreaded most,
- was Wilmington. Here we left the train and took the steam-boat
- for Philadelphia. In making the change here I again apprehended arrest,
- but no one disturbed me, and I was soon on the broad and beautiful Delaware,
- speeding away to the Quaker City. On reaching Philadelphia in the afternoon,
- I inquired of a colored man how I could get on to New York. He directed me
- to the William-street depot, and thither I went, taking the train that night.
- I reached New York Tuesday morning, having completed the journey in less
- than twenty-four hours.
-
- My free life began on the third of September, 1838. On the morning
- of the fourth of that month, after an anxious and most perilous but safe
- journey, I found myself in the big city of New York, a FREE MAN--
- one more added to the mighty throng which, like the confused waves
- of the troubled sea, surged to and fro between the lofty walls of Broadway.
- Though dazzled with the wonders which met me on every hand, my thoughts
- could not be much withdrawn from my strange situation. For the moment,
- the dreams of my youth and the hopes of my manhood were completely fulfilled.
- The bonds that had held me to "old master" were broken. No man now
- had a right to call me his slave or assert mastery over me. I was
- in the rough and tumble of an outdoor world, to take my chance with
- the rest of its busy number. I have often been asked how I felt
- when first I found myself on free soil. There is scarcely anything
- in my experience about which I could not give a more satisfactory answer.
- A new world had opened upon me. If life is more than breath and the
- "quick round of blood," I lived more in that one day than in a year
- of my slave life. It was a time of joyous excitement which words
- can but tamely describe. In a letter written to a friend soon after
- reaching New York, I said: "I felt as one might feel upon escape
- from a den of hungry lions." Anguish and grief, like darkness and rain,
- may be depicted; but gladness and joy, like the rainbow, defy the skill
- of pen or pencil. During ten or fifteen years I had been, as it were,
- dragging a heavy chain which no strength of mine could break;
- I was not only a slave, but a slave for life. I might become a husband,
- a father, an aged man, but through all, from birth to death, from the cradle
- to the grave, I had felt myself doomed. All efforts I had previously made
- to secure my freedom had not only failed, but had seemed only to rivet
- my fetters the more firmly, and to render my escape more difficult.
- Baffled, entangled, and discouraged, I had at times asked myself
- the question, May not my condition after all be God's work,
- and ordered for a wise purpose, and if so, Is not submission my duty?
- A contest had in fact been going on in my mind for a long time,
- between the clear consciousness of right and the plausible make-
- shifts of theology and superstition. The one held me an abject
- slave--a prisoner for life, punished for some transgression in
- which I had no lot nor part; and the other counseled me to manly
- endeavor to secure my freedom. This contest was now ended; my
- chains were broken, and the victory brought me unspeakable joy.
-
- But my gladness was short-lived, for I was not yet out of the reach
- and power of the slave-holders. I soon found that New York was not quite
- so free or so safe a refuge as I had supposed, and a sense of loneliness
- and insecurity again oppressed me most sadly. I chanced to meet on the street,
- a few hours after my landing, a fugitive slave whom I had once known well
- in slavery. The information received from him alarmed me. The fugitive
- in question was known in Baltimore as "Allender's Jake," but in New York
- he wore the more respectable name of "William Dixon." Jake, in law,
- was the property of Doctor Allender, and Tolly Allender, the son
- of the doctor, had once made an effort to recapture MR. DIXON,
- but had failed for want of evidence to support his claim.
- Jake told me the circumstances of this attempt, and how narrowly
- he escaped being sent back to slavery and torture. He told me that New York
- was then full of Southerners returning from the Northern watering-places;
- that the colored people of New York were not to be trusted; that there were
- hired men of my own color who would betray me for a few dollars;
- that there were hired men ever on the lookout for fugitives;
- that I must trust no man with my secret; that I must not think
- of going either upon the wharves or into any colored boarding-house,
- for all such places were closely watched; that he was himself unable
- to help me; and, in fact, he seemed while speaking to me to fear lest
- I myself might be a spy and a betrayer. Under this apprehension,
- as I suppose, he showed signs of wishing to be rid of me,
- and with whitewash brush in hand, in search of work, he soon disappeared.
-
- This picture, given by poor "Jake," of New York, was a damper
- to my enthusiasm. My little store of money would soon be exhausted,
- and since it would be unsafe for me to go on the wharves for work,
- and I had no introductions elsewhere, the prospect for me was far from
- cheerful. I saw the wisdom of keeping away from the ship-yards,
- for, if pursued, as I felt certain I should be, Mr. Auld, my "master,"
- would naturally seek me there among the calkers. Every door seemed closed
- against me. I was in the midst of an ocean of my fellow-men,
- and yet a perfect stranger to every one. I was without home,
- without acquaintance, without money, without credit, without work,
- and without any definite knowledge as to what course to take,
- or where to look for succor. In such an extremity, a man had something
- besides his new-born freedom to think of. While wandering about the streets
- of New York, and lodging at least one night among the barrels on one
- of the wharves, I was indeed free--from slavery, but free from
- food and shelter as well. I kept my secret to myself as long as I could,
- but I was compelled at last to seek some one who would befriend me without
- taking advantage of my destitution to betray me. Such a person I found
- in a sailor named Stuart, a warm-hearted and generous fellow, who, from his
- humble home on Centre street, saw me standing on the opposite sidewalk,
- near the Tombs prison. As he approached me, I ventured a remark to him
- which at once enlisted his interest in me. He took me to his home to spend
- the night, and in the morning went with me to Mr. David Ruggles,
- the secretary of the New York Vigilance Committee, a co-worker with
- Isaac T. Hopper, Lewis and Arthur Tappan, Theodore S. Wright, Samuel Cornish,
- Thomas Downing, Philip A. Bell, and other true men of their time.
- All these (save Mr. Bell, who still lives, and is editor and publisher of a paper
- called the "Elevator," in San Francisco) have finished their work on earth.
- Once in the hands of these brave and wise men, I felt comparatively safe.
- With Mr. Ruggles, on the corner of Lispenard and Church streets,
- I was hidden several days, during which time my intended wife came on
- from Baltimore at my call, to share the burdens of life with me.
- She was a free woman, and came at once on getting the good news of my safety.
- We were married by Rev. J. W. C. Pennington, then a well-known and respected
- Presbyterian minister. I had no money with which to pay the marriage fee,
- but he seemed well pleased with our thanks.
-
- Mr. Ruggles was the first officer on the "Underground Railroad"
- whom I met after coming North, and was, indeed, the only one with whom
- I had anything to do till I became such an officer myself.
- Learning that my trade was that of a calker, he promptly decided
- that the best place for me was in New Bedford, Mass.
- He told me that many ships for whaling voyages were fitted out there,
- and that I might there find work at my trade and make a good living.
- So, on the day of the marriage ceremony, we took our little luggage
- to the steamer John W. Richmond, which, at that time, was one of the line
- running between New York and Newport, R. I. Forty-three years ago
- colored travelers were not permitted in the cabin, nor allowed abaft
- the paddle-wheels of a steam vessel. They were compelled,
- whatever the weather might be,--whether cold or hot, wet or dry,--
- to spend the night on deck. Unjust as this regulation was,
- it did not trouble us much; we had fared much harder before.
- We arrived at Newport the next morning, and soon after an
- old fashioned stage-coach, with "New Bedford" in large yellow letters
- on its sides, came down to the wharf. I had not money enough to pay our fare,
- and stood hesitating what to do. Fortunately for us, there were two
- Quaker gentlemen who were about to take passage on the stage,--
- Friends William C. Taber and Joseph Ricketson,--who at once discerned
- our true situation, and, in a peculiarly quiet way, addressing me,
- Mr. Taber said: "Thee get in." I never obeyed an order with more alacrity,
- and we were soon on our way to our new home. When we reached "Stone Bridge"
- the passengers alighted for breakfast, and paid their fares to the driver.
- We took no breakfast, and, when asked for our fares, I told the driver
- I would make it right with him when we reached New Bedford.
- I expected some objection to this on his part, but he made none.
- When, however, we reached New Bedford, he took our baggage,
- including three music-books,--two of them collections by Dyer,
- and one by Shaw,--and held them until I was able to redeem them
- by paying to him the amount due for our rides. This was soon done,
- for Mr. Nathan Johnson not only received me kindly and hospitably,
- but, on being informed about our baggage, at once loaned me the two
- dollars with which to square accounts with the stage-driver.
- Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Johnson reached a good old age, and now rest
- from their labors. I am under many grateful obligations to them.
- They not only "took me in when a stranger" and "fed me when hungry,"
- but taught me how to make an honest living. Thus, in a fortnight
- after my flight from Maryland, I was safe in New Bedford, a citizen of
- the grand old commonwealth of Massachusetts.
-
- Once initiated into my new life of freedom and assured by Mr. Johnson
- that I need not fear recapture in that city, a comparatively unimportant
- question arose as to the name by which I should be known thereafter
- in my new relation as a free man. The name given me by my dear mother
- was no less pretentious and long than Frederick Augustus Washington Bailey.
- I had, however, while living in Maryland, dispensed with the
- Augustus Washington, and retained only Frederick Bailey.
- Between Baltimore and New Bedford, the better to conceal myself
- from the slave-hunters, I had parted with Bailey and called myself Johnson;
- but in New Bedford I found that the Johnson family was already so numerous
- as to cause some confusion in distinguishing them, hence a change in this name
- seemed desirable. Nathan Johnson, mine host, placed great emphasis upon
- this necessity, and wished me to allow him to select a name for me.
- I consented, and he called me by my present name--the one by which
- I have been known for three and forty years--Frederick Douglass.
- Mr. Johnson had just been reading the "Lady of the Lake,"
- and so pleased was he with its great character that he wished me
- to bear his name. Since reading that charming poem myself,
- I have often thought that, considering the noble hospitality
- and manly character of Nathan Johnson--black man though he was--he,
- far more than I, illustrated the virtues of the Douglas of Scotland.
- Sure am I that, if any slave-catcher had entered his domicile
- with a view to my recapture, Johnson would have shown himself like him
- of the "stalwart hand."
-
- The reader may be surprised at the impressions I had in some way conceived
- of the social and material condition of the people at the North.
- I had no proper idea of the wealth, refinement, enterprise,
- and high civilization of this section of the country.
- My "Columbian Orator," almost my only book, had done nothing
- to enlighten me concerning Northern society. I had been taught
- that slavery was the bottom fact of all wealth. With this foundation idea,
- I came naturally to the conclusion that poverty must be the general
- condition of the people of the free States. In the country from which I came,
- a white man holding no slaves was usually an ignorant and poverty-stricken man,
- and men of this class were contemptuously called "poor white trash."
- Hence I supposed that, since the non-slave-holders at the South were ignorant,
- poor, and degraded as a class, the non-slave-holders at the North must be
- in a similar condition. I could have landed in no part of the United States
- where I should have found a more striking and gratifying contrast,
- not only to life generally in the South, but in the condition of the colored
- people there, than in New Bedford. I was amazed when Mr. Johnson told me
- that there was nothing in the laws or constitution of Massachusetts
- that would prevent a colored man from being governor of the State,
- if the people should see fit to elect him. There, too, the black man's
- children attended the public schools with the white man's children,
- and apparently without objection from any quarter. To impress me
- with my security from recapture and return to slavery, Mr. Johnson
- assured me that no slave-holder could take a slave out of New Bedford;
- that there were men there who would lay down their lives to save me
- from such a fate.
-
- The fifth day after my arrival, I put on the clothes of a common laborer,
- and went upon the wharves in search of work. On my way down Union street
- I saw a large pile of coal in front of the house of Rev. Ephraim Peabody,
- the Unitarian minister. I went to the kitchen door and asked the privilege
- of bringing in and putting away this coal. "What will you charge?"
- said the lady. "I will leave that to you, madam." "You may put it away,"
- she said. I was not long in accomplishing the job, when the dear lady
- put into my hand TWO SILVER HALF-DOLLARS. To understand the emotion
- which swelled my heart as I clasped this money, realizing that I had no
- master who could take it from me,--THAT IT WAS MINE--THAT MY HANDS WERE MY OWN,
- and could earn more of the precious coin,--one must have been in some sense
- himself a slave. My next job was stowing a sloop at Uncle Gid. Howland's
- wharf with a cargo of oil for New York. I was not only a freeman,
- but a free working-man, and no "master" stood ready at the end of the week
- to seize my hard earnings.
-
- The season was growing late and work was plenty. Ships were being
- fitted out for whaling, and much wood was used in storing them.
- The sawing this wood was considered a good job. With the help
- of old Friend Johnson (blessings on his memory) I got a saw and "buck,"
- and went at it. When I went into a store to buy a cord with which
- to brace up my saw in the frame, I asked for a "fip's" worth of cord.
- The man behind the counter looked rather sharply at me, and said with
- equal sharpness, "You don't belong about here." I was alarmed,
- and thought I had betrayed myself. A fip in Maryland was
- six and a quarter cents, called fourpence in Massachusetts.
- But no harm came from the "fi'penny-bit" blunder, and I confidently
- and cheerfully went to work with my saw and buck. It was new business to me,
- but I never did better work, or more of it, in the same space of time
- on the plantation for Covey, the negro-breaker, than I did for myself
- in these earliest years of my freedom.
-
- Notwithstanding the just and humane sentiment of New Bedford
- three and forty years ago, the place was not entirely free from
- race and color prejudice. The good influence of the Roaches,
- Rodmans, Arnolds, Grinnells, and Robesons did not pervade all
- classes of its people. The test of the real civilization of the
- community came when I applied for work at my trade, and then my
- repulse was emphatic and decisive. It so happened that Mr. Rodney
- French, a wealthy and enterprising citizen, distinguished as an
- anti-slavery man, was fitting out a vessel for a whaling voyage,
- upon which there was a heavy job of calking and coppering to be
- done. I had some skill in both branches, and applied to Mr. French
- for work. He, generous man that he was, told me he would employ
- me, and I might go at once to the vessel. I obeyed him, but upon
- reaching the float-stage, where others [sic] calkers were at work,
- I was told that every white man would leave the ship, in her
- unfinished condition, if I struck a blow at my trade upon her.
- This uncivil, inhuman, and selfish treatment was not so shocking
- and scandalous in my eyes at the time as it now appears to me.
- Slavery had inured me to hardships that made ordinary trouble sit
- lightly upon me. Could I have worked at my trade I could have
- earned two dollars a day, but as a common laborer I received but
- one dollar. The difference was of great importance to me, but if
- I could not get two dollars, I was glad to get one; and so I went
- to work for Mr. French as a common laborer. The consciousness
- that I was free--no longer a slave--kept me cheerful under this,
- and many similar proscriptions, which I was destined to meet in
- New Bedford and elsewhere on the free soil of Massachusetts.
- For instance, though colored children attended the schools,
- and were treated kindly by their teachers, the New Bedford Lyceum
- refused, till several years after my residence in that city,
- to allow any colored person to attend the lectures delivered in its
- hall. Not until such men as Charles Sumner, Theodore Parker,
- Ralph Waldo Emerson, and Horace Mann refused to lecture in their
- course while there was such a restriction, was it abandoned.
-
- Becoming satisfied that I could not rely on my trade in New
- Bedford to give me a living, I prepared myself to do any kind of
- work that came to hand. I sawed wood, shoveled coal, dug cellars,
- moved rubbish from back yards, worked on the wharves, loaded and
- unloaded vessels, and scoured their cabins.
-
- I afterward got steady work at the brass-foundry owned by Mr. Richmond.
- My duty here was to blow the bellows, swing the crane, and empty the flasks
- in which castings were made; and at times this was hot and heavy work.
- The articles produced here were mostly for ship work, and in the busy season
- the foundry was in operation night and day. I have often worked two nights
- and every working day of the week. My foreman, Mr. Cobb, was a good man,
- and more than once protected me from abuse that one or more of the hands
- was disposed to throw upon me. While in this situation I had little time
- for mental improvement. Hard work, night and day, over a furnace hot
- enough to keep the metal running like water, was more favorable
- to action than thought; yet here I often nailed a newspaper to the post
- near my bellows, and read while I was performing the up and down motion
- of the heavy beam by which the bellows was inflated and discharged.
- It was the pursuit of knowledge under difficulties, and I look back to it now,
- after so many years, with some complacency and a little wonder that I could
- have been so earnest and persevering in any pursuit other than for my
- daily bread. I certainly saw nothing in the conduct of those around
- to inspire me with such interest: they were all devoted exclusively
- to what their hands found to do. I am glad to be able to say that,
- during my engagement in this foundry, no complaint was ever made against
- me that I did not do my work, and do it well. The bellows which I worked
- by main strength was, after I left, moved by a steam-engine.
-
-
-
-
- Douglass, Frederick. "Reconstruction."
- Atlantic Monthly 18 (1866): 761-765.
-
-
-
- RECONSTRUCTION
-
-
- The assembling of the Second Session of the Thirty-ninth Congress
- may very properly be made the occasion of a few earnest words
- on the already much-worn topic of reconstruction.
-
- Seldom has any legislative body been the subject of a solicitude
- more intense, or of aspirations more sincere and ardent.
- There are the best of reasons for this profound interest.
- Questions of vast moment, left undecided by the last session of Congress,
- must be manfully grappled with by this. No political skirmishing will avail.
- The occasion demands statesmanship.
-
- Whether the tremendous war so heroically fought and so victoriously ended
- shall pass into history a miserable failure, barren of permanent results,--
- a scandalous and shocking waste of blood and treasure,--a strife for empire,
- as Earl Russell characterized it, of no value to liberty or civilization,
- --an attempt to re-establish a Union by force, which must be the
- merest mockery of a Union,--an effort to bring under Federal authority
- States into which no loyal man from the North may safely enter,
- and to bring men into the national councils who deliberate with daggers
- and vote with revolvers, and who do not even conceal their deadly hate
- of the country that conquered them; or whether, on the other hand,
- we shall, as the rightful reward of victory over treason, have a solid nation,
- entirely delivered from all contradictions and social antagonisms,
- based upon loyalty, liberty, and equality, must be determined one way
- or the other by the present session of Congress. The last session
- really did nothing which can be considered final as to these questions.
- The Civil Rights Bill and the Freedmen's Bureau Bill and the proposed
- constitutional amendments, with the amendment already adopted and recognized
- as the law of the land, do not reach the difficulty, and cannot,
- unless the whole structure of the government is changed from a
- government by States to something like a despotic central government,
- with power to control even the municipal regulations of States,
- and to make them conform to its own despotic will. While there remains
- such an idea as the right of each State to control its own local affairs,--
- an idea, by the way, more deeply rooted in the minds of men of all sections
- of the country than perhaps any one other political idea,--no general assertion
- of human rights can be of any practical value. To change the character
- of the government at this point is neither possible nor desirable.
- All that is necessary to be done is to make the government consistent
- with itself, and render the rights of the States compatible with the sacred
- rights of human nature.
-
- The arm of the Federal government is long, but it is far too short
- to protect the rights of individuals in the interior of distant States.
- They must have the power to protect themselves, or they will go unprotected,
- spite of all the laws the Federal government can put upon the national
- statute-book.
-
- Slavery, like all other great systems of wrong, founded in the depths
- of human selfishness, and existing for ages, has not neglected its own
- conservation. It has steadily exerted an influence upon all around
- it favorable to its own continuance. And to-day it is so strong
- that it could exist, not only without law, but even against law.
- Custom, manners, morals, religion, are all on its side everywhere
- in the South; and when you add the ignorance and servility
- of the ex-slave to the intelligence and accustomed authority
- of the master, you have the conditions, not out of which slavery
- will again grow, but under which it is impossible for the Federal
- government to wholly destroy it, unless the Federal government
- be armed with despotic power, to blot out State authority,
- and to station a Federal officer at every cross-road.
- This, of course, cannot be done, and ought not even if it could.
- The true way and the easiest way is to make our government entirely
- consistent with itself, and give to every loyal citizen the elective franchise,
- --a right and power which will be ever present, and will form a wall
- of fire for his protection.
-
- One of the invaluable compensations of the late Rebellion
- is the highly instructive disclosure it made of the true source
- of danger to republican government. Whatever may be tolerated
- in monarchical and despotic governments, no republic is safe
- that tolerates a privileged class, or denies to any of its citizens
- equal rights and equal means to maintain them. What was theory
- before the war has been made fact by the war.
-
- There is cause to be thankful even for rebellion. It is an impressive teacher,
- though a stern and terrible one. In both characters it has come to us,
- and it was perhaps needed in both. It is an instructor never
- a day before its time, for it comes only when all other means
- of progress and enlightenment have failed. Whether the oppressed
- and despairing bondman, no longer able to repress his deep yearnings
- for manhood, or the tyrant, in his pride and impatience, takes the initiative,
- and strikes the blow for a firmer hold and a longer lease of oppression,
- the result is the same,--society is instructed, or may be.
-
- Such are the limitations of the common mind, and so thoroughly
- engrossing are the cares of common life, that only the few among
- men can discern through the glitter and dazzle of present prosperity
- the dark outlines of approaching disasters, even though they may have
- come up to our very gates, and are already within striking distance.
- The yawning seam and corroded bolt conceal their defects from the mariner
- until the storm calls all hands to the pumps. Prophets, indeed,
- were abundant before the war; but who cares for prophets while
- their predictions remain unfulfilled, and the calamities of which
- they tell are masked behind a blinding blaze of national prosperity?
-
- It is asked, said Henry Clay, on a memorable occasion,
- Will slavery never come to an end? That question, said he,
- was asked fifty years ago, and it has been answered by fifty years
- of unprecedented prosperity. Spite of the eloquence of the earnest
- Abolitionists,--poured out against slavery during thirty years,--
- even they must confess, that, in all the probabilities of the case,
- that system of barbarism would have continued its horrors far beyond
- the limits of the nineteenth century but for the Rebellion,
- and perhaps only have disappeared at last in a fiery conflict,
- even more fierce and bloody than that which has now been suppressed.
-
- It is no disparagement to truth, that it can only prevail
- where reason prevails. War begins where reason ends.
- The thing worse than rebellion is the thing that causes rebellion.
- What that thing is, we have been taught to our cost. It remains now
- to be seen whether we have the needed courage to have that cause
- entirely removed from the Republic. At any rate, to this grand work
- of national regeneration and entire purification Congress must
- now address Itself, with full purpose that the work shall this time
- be thoroughly done. The deadly upas, root and branch, leaf and fibre,
- body and sap, must be utterly destroyed. The country is evidently
- not in a condition to listen patiently to pleas for postponement,
- however plausible, nor will it permit the responsibility to be shifted
- to other shoulders. Authority and power are here commensurate
- with the duty imposed. There are no cloud-flung shadows to obscure the way.
- Truth shines with brighter light and intenser heat at every moment,
- and a country torn and rent and bleeding implores relief
- from its distress and agony.
-
- If time was at first needed, Congress has now had time.
- All the requisite materials from which to form an intelligent
- judgment are now before it. Whether its members look at the origin,
- the progress, the termination of the war, or at the mockery of
- a peace now existing, they will find only one unbroken chain of argument
- in favor of a radical policy of reconstruction. For the omissions
- of the last session, some excuses may be allowed. A treacherous
- President stood in the way; and it can be easily seen how reluctant
- good men might be to admit an apostasy which involved so much
- of baseness and ingratitude. It was natural that they should seek
- to save him by bending to him even when he leaned to the side
- of error. But all is changed now. Congress knows now that it must
- go on without his aid, and even against his machinations.
- The advantage of the present session over the last is immense.
- Where that investigated, this has the facts. Where that walked by faith,
- this may walk by sight. Where that halted, this must go forward,
- and where that failed, this must succeed, giving the country whole
- measures where that gave us half-measures, merely as a means of
- saving the elections in a few doubtful districts. That Congress saw
- what was right, but distrusted the enlightenment of the loyal masses;
- but what was forborne in distrust of the people must now be done
- with a full knowledge that the people expect and require it.
- The members go to Washington fresh from the inspiring presence of the people.
- In every considerable public meeting, and in almost every conceivable way,
- whether at court-house, school-house, or cross-roads, in doors and out,
- the subject has been discussed, and the people have emphatically pronounced
- in favor of a radical policy. Listening to the doctrines of expediency
- and compromise with pity, impatience, and disgust, they have everywhere
- broken into demonstrations of the wildest enthusiasm when a brave word
- has been spoken in favor of equal rights and impartial suffrage.
- Radicalism, so far from being odious, is not the popular passport to power.
- The men most bitterly charged with it go to Congress with the
- largest majorities, while the timid and doubtful are sent by lean majorities,
- or else left at home. The strange controversy between the President
- and the Congress, at one time so threatening, is disposed of by the people.
- The high reconstructive powers which he so confidently, ostentatiously,
- and haughtily claimed, have been disallowed, denounced, and utterly repudiated;
- while those claimed by Congress have been confirmed.
-
- Of the spirit and magnitude of the canvass nothing need be said.
- The appeal was to the people, and the verdict was worthy of the tribunal.
- Upon an occasion of his own selection, with the advice and approval
- of his astute Secretary, soon after the members of the Congress had returned
- to their constituents, the President quitted the executive mansion,
- sandwiched himself between two recognized heroes,--men whom the whole country
- delighted to honor,--and, with all the advantage which such company
- could give him, stumped the country from the Atlantic to the Mississippi,
- advocating everywhere his policy as against that of Congress.
- It was a strange sight, and perhaps the most disgraceful exhibition
- ever made by any President; but, as no evil is entirely unmixed,
- good has come of this, as from many others. Ambitious, unscrupulous,
- energetic, indefatigable, voluble, and plausible,--a political gladiator,
- ready for a "set-to" in any crowd,--he is beaten in his own chosen field,
- and stands to-day before the country as a convicted usurper,
- a political criminal, guilty of a bold and persistent attempt
- to possess himself of the legislative powers solemnly secured to Congress
- by the Constitution. No vindication could be more complete,
- no condemnation could be more absolute and humiliating.
- Unless reopened by the sword, as recklessly threatened in some circles,
- this question is now closed for all time.
-
- Without attempting to settle here the metaphysical and somewhat
- theological question (about which so much has already been said and written),
- whether once in the Union means always in the Union,--agreeably to the formula,
- Once in grace always in grace,-- it is obvious to common sense that the
- rebellious States stand to- day, in point of law, precisely where
- they stood when, exhausted, beaten, conquered, they fell powerless
- at the feet of Federal authority. Their State governments were overthrown,
- and the lives and property of the leaders of the Rebellion were forfeited.
- In reconstructing the institutions of these shattered and overthrown States,
- Congress should begin with a clean slate, and make clean work of it.
- Let there be no hesitation. It would be a cowardly deference
- to a defeated and treacherous President, if any account were made of
- the illegitimate, one-sided, sham governments hurried into existence
- for a malign purpose in the absence of Congress. These pretended governments,
- which were never submitted to the people, and from participation in which
- four millions of the loyal people were excluded by Presidential order,
- should now be treated according to their true character, as shams
- and impositions, and supplanted by true and legitimate governments,
- in the formation of which loyal men, black and white, shall participate.
-
- It is not, however, within the scope of this paper to point out
- the precise steps to be taken, and the means to be employed.
- The people are less concerned about these than the grand end to be attained.
- They demand such a reconstruction as shall put an end to the present anarchical
- state of things in the late rebellious States,--where frightful murders and
- wholesale massacres are perpetrated in the very presence of Federal soldiers.
- This horrible business they require shall cease. They want a reconstruction
- such as will protect loyal men, black and white, in their persons and property;
- such a one as will cause Northern industry, Northern capital, and Northern
- civilization to flow into the South, and make a man from New England
- as much at home in Carolina as elsewhere in the Republic.
- No Chinese wall can now be tolerated. The South must be opened
- to the light of law and liberty, and this session of Congress
- is relied upon to accomplish this important work.
-
- The plain, common-sense way of doing this work, as intimated
- at the beginning, is simply to establish in the South one law,
- one government, one administration of justice, one condition
- to the exercise of the elective franchise, for men of all races
- and colors alike. This great measure is sought as earnestly
- by loyal white men as by loyal blacks, and is needed alike by both.
- Let sound political prescience but take the place of an
- unreasoning prejudice, and this will be done.
-
- Men denounce the negro for his prominence in this discussion;
- but it is no fault of his that in peace as in war, that in
- conquering Rebel armies as in reconstructing the rebellious States,
- the right of the negro is the true solution of our national
- troubles. The stern logic of events, which goes directly to the
- point, disdaining all concern for the color or features of men,
- has determined the interests of the country as identical with
- and inseparable from those of the negro.
-
- The policy that emancipated and armed the negro--now seen to
- have been wise and proper by the dullest--was not certainly more
- sternly demanded than is now the policy of enfranchisement.
- If with the negro was success in war, and without him failure,
- so in peace it will be found that the nation must fall or flourish
- with the negro.
-
- Fortunately, the Constitution of the United States knows no distinction
- between citizens on account of color. Neither does it know any difference
- between a citizen of a State and a citizen of the United States.
- Citizenship evidently includes all the rights of citizens,
- whether State or national. If the Constitution knows none,
- it is clearly no part of the duty of a Republican Congress
- now to institute one. The mistake of the last session
- was the attempt to do this very thing, by a renunciation
- of its power to secure political rights to any class of citizens,
- with the obvious purpose to allow the rebellious States to disfranchise,
- if they should see fit, their colored citizens. This unfortunate blunder
- must now be retrieved, and the emasculated citizenship given to the negro
- supplanted by that contemplated in the Constitution of the United States,
- which declares that the citizens of each State shall enjoy all the rights
- and immunities of citizens of the several States,--so that a legal voter
- in any State shall be a legal voter in all the States.
-
-
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