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BC Guest Commentator Marion Kilson,
PhD will appear on Make
It Plain with Mark Thompson on Sirius Radio - Left
Channel 146 on February 28th, 2008 at 7pm Eastern Time.
She will discuss Honoring
a First in African American History.
In the midst of the turbulent decade preceding
the Civil War, black Boston activist and journalist William Cooper Nell
achieved a milestone in American historiography. Fully engaged
in the decade’s battles challenging African American civic
rights from the passage of the Fugitive Slave Act in 1850
through the territorial expansion of slavery to the Dred Scott
Decision of 1857, Nell also succeeded in completing The
Colored Patriots of the American Revolution.
Published in the summer of 1855, Nell’s book is considered
to be the first research-based historical study by an African
American.
In addition to writing this path-breaking volume,
Nell created, championed, and chronicled equal rights battles
of black Boston not
only in the 1850s but throughout the antebellum decades. As
an advocate for the civil equality of black Americans, William
Cooper Nell personally challenged “colorphobia”; authored
studies chronicling the military valor of blacks in American
wars; wrote articles attesting to black social and cultural
achievements; created educational, literary, and dramatic
organizations; and inaugurated celebrations that confronted
racial inequities.
As
a Garrisonian abolitionist, Nell supported immediate emancipation
of enslaved people and the achievement of equal rights in
all spheres of life for African Americans. As an American
of color, Nell sought political rights for African Americans
and opposed efforts to exile free blacks from their homeland.
As a humanitarian activist, Nell assisted self-emancipated
blacks during their sojourns in Boston.
As a political activist with personal experience of racial
discrimination in his schooling and his daily life, Nell championed
racial integration in public schools, public transportation,
theatres, and other public places, as well as in the military;
Nell also participated as a Boston delegate in national black political conventions and gatherings.
Finally, as a man with broad cultural interests and concern
for African American social uplift, Nell co-founded and led
antebellum black Boston
cultural and civic organizations, such as the Adelphic Union
Library Association, Garrison Association, Garrison Independent
Society, the Histrionic Club, New England Freedom Association,
Union Progressive Association, and the Young Men’s Literary
Society.
Three years after the publication of The
Colored Patriots of the American Revolution,
Nell organized a Crispus Attucks Commemorative Festival in
Faneuil Hall on March 5, 1858 to protest the Dred Scott decision
of the U.S. Supreme Court that declared African Americans
were not citizens. African American Attucks was the first
patriot to fall during the Boston Massacre. At this celebration,
fiery speeches by black and white abolitionists including
John Rock, Wendell Phillips, Theodore Parker, William Lloyd
Garrison, and Charles Lenox Remond were interspersed with
songs titled Freedom’s Battle, Colored American Heroes of 1776, and Red, White, and Blue.
This was the first of seven Attucks Commemorative Celebrations
that Nell organized to replace July 4 as an Independence Day
celebration for black Boston.
William Cooper Nell, however, was not simply
a creator of and participant in significant events in black
Boston during the
antebellum decades, he also recorded them.
Almost every report of a black Boston community
meeting and every article about black Bostonians’ social and
cultural achievements from the late 1830s until 1865 in The
Liberator bore the initials “W. C. N.” or the name “William
C. Nell.” Thanks primarily to Nell’s numerous contributions,
The Liberator - William Lloyd Garrison’s weekly anti-slavery
newspaper - remains the best source on the cultural, social
and political life of black Bostonians in the antebellum years.
A Black
Bostonian
William
Cooper Nell (1816-1874) was first and foremost a black Bostonian.
Apart from twenty-one months when he was the first printer
and publisher of Frederick Douglass’ The North Star in Rochester,
New York, Boston
was his home. Born on Beacon Hill in 1816 to free parents
- William Guion Nell from Charleston,
South Carolina and Louisa Marshall Nell from Brookline, Massachusetts -
Nell was the eldest of four surviving children. His father
was the proprietor of a successful tailoring business, a founder
and leader in Massachusetts’ first abolitionist society - the Massachusetts General
Colored Association, and a friend and neighbor of David Walker,
creator of the influential and controversial pamphlet, David
Walker's Appeal: To the Coloured Citizens of the World,
which advocated slave insurrection as the road to emancipation.
From early childhood, then, William Cooper Nell was exposed
to community activism.
Transformative
Experiences
As an adolescent, Nell had two transformative
experiences that shaped his later life as a creator and recorder
of milestones. The first, occurred when he was thirteen years
old in 1829; the second, when he was fifteen in 1832.
In 1829, Nell graduated from the segregated
Boston public school
housed in the African Meeting House. At that time Boston public grammar school graduates of academic excellence were recognized
as Franklin Scholars; Nell and two classmates were chosen
as Franklin Scholars from the African
School. While white students received
a medal and an invitation to dine with the Mayor of Boston,
black students received a voucher to purchase a biography
of Benjamin Franklin at a local bookstore. William Cooper
Nell was deeply affected by this discriminatory experience.
He later said “The impression made on my mind, by this day’s
experience, deepened into a solemn vow that, God helping me,
I would do my best to hasten the day when the color of the
skin would be no barrier to equal school rights (The Liberator,
December 28, 1855:206-207).” From 1840 until 1855, Nell led
the battle for equal school rights in Boston: he called community
meetings on equal school rights, he recorded their minutes,
he helped to arrange alternative schools for black families
boycotting segregated schools, he collected hundreds of petitions
first to the School Committee, then to the Department of Education,
and finally to the Legislature. In 1855, the Massachusetts legislature desegregated the Boston public schools. Black Boston recognized that
Nell was primarily responsible for achieving this milestone,
for it held a celebration honoring him at which he received
a gold watch “for his untiring efforts on behalf of Equal
School Rights” and laudatory praise from such noted black
and white abolitionists as William Lloyd Garrison, Wendell
Phillips, and Charles Lenox Remond.
The second transformative experience in Nell’s
early life occurred on the snowy blustery night of January
6, 1832 when Nell was fifteen years old. Passing along Belknap Street on his way home, Nell noticed a light shining from a
basement window of the African Meeting House. Peering through
the window, Nell witnessed an historic event - the founding
of the New England Anti-Slavery Society, for Nell saw William
Lloyd Garrison and eleven other white men sign the society’s
constitution, observed by several black men. Throughout his
adult life, Nell was an ardent supporter of both Garrisonian
abolitionism the cause and William Lloyd Garrison the man.
Garrisonian abolitionism called not only for the immediate
emancipation of all enslaved people but for the civil equality
of African Americans. Nell’s adult life was devoted to these
twin aspects of Garrisonian abolition.
With respect to the abolition of slavery, Nell
advocated immediate emancipation and supported self-emancipated
people in Boston
and beyond. As an advocate for emancipation, Nell supported
the integration of blacks into American society and opposed
colonization schemes which would have sent free African Americans
to Africa, the Caribbean, the far West, or Mexico. He presented
his views not only in Boston but as a
delegate to national African American Conventions in Buffalo,
Troy, Rochester, Cleveland, and Philadelphia.
As a supporter of self-emancipated people, Nell helped to
raise funds for newly freed people in Washington,
D.C. and for white supporters incarcerated
for assisting enslaved people on their flights to freedom.
He also offered direct assistance to self-liberated people
who found their way to Boston from the South. In 1843, Nell helped to found
the New England Freedom Association to assist fugitives; the
Association merged with the interracial Boston Vigilance Committee
in 1850 following the passage of the Fugitive Slave Law. The
treasurer’s records of the Boston Vigilance Committee show
that William Cooper Nell was second only to self-liberated
Lewis Hayden in assisting new-comers to Boston in their passage from enslavement to self-emancipation
on the Underground Railroad. As a Liberator staff member,
Nell also ran an employment agency for newly-arrived African
Americans, placing advertisements about positions and candidates
for positions in the newspaper. Moreover, unlike pacifist
Garrison, Nell advocated the use of force - if necessary -
to achieve emancipation and to ensure freedom. Thus, he raised
funds to support John Brown’s Raid on Harper’s Ferry and he
warned fellow-Bostonians to be vigilant about man-catchers
abroad on the city streets and to be prepared to defend themselves.
Precarious
Personal Finances
Until
he became a postal clerk in 1861 - the first African American
to receive a non-military federal appointment, Nell never
had a steady income. He worked for The Liberator from time
to time; he read law for two and a half years with Boston
abolitionist, William I. Bowditch, but never practiced as
he would have had to swear to uphold the U.S. Constitution
which he considered a pro-slavery document; he advertised
his services as a clerk, accountant, and copyist; he helped
his father as a tailor; he created lithographs of Wendell
Phillips, William Lloyd Garrison, and others for sale, but
until 1861 he never had a reliable income.
Historiographic
Milestone
In
1855, Nell achieved a milestone in American historiography
with the publication of The
Colored Patriots of the American Revolution,
the first book-length scholarly history by an African American.
As a second-generation black Boston activist and as a Garrisonian abolitionist, Nell made the case
that civil equality was due to African Americans, because
of their significant contributions to the founding of the
nation. He wished to reveal the largely unrecognized history
of African American military valor and patriotism, not only
to enhance the understanding of sympathetic white Americans,
but to encourage the aspirations for social advancement of
African Americans. As a youth, Nell had found the limitations
that racial prejudice placed upon his opportunities nearly
over-whelming. A couple of years after the Franklin
medal incident he had told his Sunday School teacher, “‘What’s
the use in my attempting to improve myself, when, do what
I may, I can never be anything but a nigger?’”[1] Fortunately for Nell and for black
Boston, he triumphed
over this view.
In his preface to The Colored Patriots, Nell
states his aim “to rescue from oblivion the name and fame
of those who, though ‘tinged with the hated stain,’ yet had
warm hearts and active hands in the ‘times that tried men’s
souls (p. 9).’” The full title of the book, however, reveals
Nell’s larger intention: The
Colored Patriots of the American Revolution
with sketches of several Distinguished Colored Persons: to
which is added a brief survey of the Condition and Prospects
of Colored Americans.
This ambitious pioneering book falls into two
distinct parts: the first is a state by state presentation
of the military services of men of color in all American wars
and of bio-sketches of notable people of color as well as
selected information about the quest for equal rights and
a socioeconomic profile of people of color within each state;
the second considers vital contemporary issues confronting
people of color: their citizenship rights, their social and
cultural advancement, and his guardedly optimistic assessment
of the success of the abolitionist movement and the possibilities
for attaining equity within a racially integrated American
society. In the final pages his book, Nell writes:
“The Revolution of 1776, and in the subsequent struggles
in our nation’s history, aided, in honorable proportion,
by colored Americans, have…left the necessity of a second
revolution, no less sublime than that of regenerating public
sentiment in favor of Universal Brotherhood. To this glorious
consummation, all, of every complexion, sect, sex, and condition,
can add their mite, and so nourish the tree of liberty,
that all may be enabled to pluck fruit from its bending
branches; and, in that degree to which colored Americans
may labor to hasten the day, they will prove valid their
claim to the title, ‘Patriots of the Second Revolution ’”
(p. 380)
Nell’s book is impressive not only for its
wide-ranging scope but for its rich documentation. In his
preface, Nell modestly states that “Imperfect as these pages
may prove, to prepare even these, journeys have been made
to confer with the living, and even pilgrimages to grave-yards,
to save all that may still be gleaned from their fast disappearing
records (p. 9).” In fact, in preparing his book, Nell undertook
many more journeys to places and to publications than he admits.
He obtained information from such repositories as the Massachusetts
state house archives, the Massachusetts Historical Society,
and the Suffolk County Probate Records Office; he published
inscriptions from graveyards in Concord (MA), North Attleboro
(MA), and Middletown (CT), as well as the Massachusetts state house. He drew upon his own
personal memories and experiences of events and people; he
conversed with friends and acquaintances; some of whom he
provided him with documents. William H. Day, a black librarian
in Cleveland, gave him an American Army report on the Battle
of New Orleans, while Reverend Theodore Parker, a white abolitionist
in Boston, provided him with a sketch of Long Island, New
York Revolutionary soldiery; Dr. James M’Cune Smith, the erudite
and cosmopolitan New York doctor, wrote him about the socioeconomic
conditions and institutions of black people in his city, and
Joseph Congdon, Esq. of New Bedford obtained the 1780 petition
for equal rights submitted by Paul Cuffe and others to the
Massachusetts House of Representatives. Nell also reviewed
federal legislation pertaining to colored citizenship, noting
proscriptions upon it and the inconsistent application of
certain proscriptions; he consulted state documents, such
as Revolutionary petitions and resolves of the Massachusetts
General Court and the memorial on equal suffrage presented
to the Ohio General Assembly by J. Mercer Langston, African
American lawyer and later legislator; he also perused organizational
documents like the 1837 circular of the Anti-Slavery women
of the United States on equal rights, and the purpose and
membership of Boston’s African Society. In his quest for information
on the military services and social conditions of people of
color as well as distinguished individuals, Nell culled material
from contemporary history books, articles in magazines, memoirs,
obituaries, speeches, published letters, and newspaper articles.
Nell reviewed articles from newspapers published in cities
throughout the United States,
including Boston, Worcester,
New York, Hartford,
Newark, Pittsburgh,
New Orleans, Richmond,
Tallahassee, Philadelphia,
and Washington, D.C. The number and geographical range of these newspapers suggest
that Nell relied heavily on articles published in The Liberator
to which he had ready access as an employee and a subscriber.
The breadth of Nell’s research for his path-breaking book
is noteworthy.
In the October 26, 1855 Liberator and in a
broadside promoting the book, Nell published reviews of The
Colored Patriots that had appeared in the local and national
press. Critical notice of the book appeared in the mainstream
New York Tribune, Philadelphia Sunday Dispatch, Providence
Tribune, Kentucky Weekly News, Salem Register, Boston Evening
Telegraph, Worcester Spy, Virginia Library Sentinel, and New
Bedford Standard as well as in the anti-slavery and African
American press, including the National Era, Ohio Anti-Slavery
Bugle, National Anti-Slavery Standard, The Independent, and
Zion’s Herald. Many
reviewers commended Nell for his efforts. As an example of
critical response to Nell’s book, the Boston Daily Chronicle
considered that “Mr. Nell has done a good work, and done it
well, too, in gathering together and placing before the world
in a convenient form, numerous interesting facts that show
how strong has been the spirit of patriotism in the bosoms
of colored Americans, a race of men who would be perfectly
justified in hating this country with savage hatred, so foully
has it wronged them.”
During
the final decade of his life, Nell worked to prepare a revised
edition of Colored Patriots. In July 1865, he wrote a friend
“I am hard at work upon the new edition of my Colored Patriots
which in augmented chapters of 1776 and 1812 will contain
a record of Colored American Services in the present rebellion.
I desire to make it instrumental in promoting Equal Suffrage
for Colored Citizens throughout the United States.” In
October 1865, Nell wrote Wendell Phillips that his book was
“now nearly ready for press,” but Nell was still seeking funding
to underwrite the project in 1869 and in 1870 he was still
working on the manuscript. The revised version of Colored
Patriots was never published and the fate of the manuscript
is unknown.
Nell’s contemporaries like William Wells Brown
based their African American military studies on Nell’s work,
later scholars of the American Revolution have criticized
The Colored Patriots from various perspectives. Benjamin Quarles
in his carefully researched 1961 The Negro in the American
Revolution cites The Colored Patriots once and lists it in
his bibliography; whether Quarles used Nell’s work as a starting
point for his own carefully documented study is unknown. Nevertheless,
Quarles implicitly questions Nell’s use of undocumented oral
tradition. More recently, others have challenged “legends”
that Nell included in his book. Such criticisms of Nell’s
pioneering study do not detract from its overall value.
Recently Gary Nash has criticized Nell for
failing to include a discussion of the thousands of enslaved
people who fought with the British during America’s war for independence. The Colored Patriots
presented “an imbalanced account of the African Americans’
Revolution because it ignored the huge number of men and women,
most enslaved, who fled to and fought alongside the British
in order to gain their freedom.”[2] Given Nell’s purpose to demonstrate
that African Americans had fought and died for their country
in all its international battles and not to portray the complete
African American experience in the American Revolution, the
validity of Nash’s criticism is dubious.
Whatever
criticism may be made of William Cooper Nell’s research methods,
findings, and analysis of more than 150 years ago, Nell assured
his place in history as the author of the first research-based
study of African American patriotism and valor as well as
of the notable efforts of Colored Americans to achieve equality
in American life and letters. The publication of The
Colored Patriots of the American Revolution
was a remarkable accomplishment for a man simultaneously playing
leadership roles in Boston
and national African American quests for equal rights and
eking out a precarious livelihood while creating this milestone
in American historiography.
Conclusion
Black Boston did not forget William Cooper
Nell. For some years after his death in 1874 there was a William
C. Nell community lecture; in 1886 efforts were made to erect
a monument in his honor; in 1966, the house in Smith Court
where he had boarded for a time was placed on the Black
Heritage Trail; and in 1989 a headstone was erected on
his Forest Hills Cemetery grave. Introducing his 1863 article
on Nell, William Wells Brown eloquently captures Nell’s distinctive
contributions, “No man in New England
has performed more uncompensated labor for humanity, and especially
for his own race, than William C. Nell.”[3]The
Colored Patriots of the American Revolution
was one of Nell’s memorably enduring contributions to African
Americans in his time and ours.
BC Guest
Commentator, Dr.Marion Kilson, received her Ph. D. in Social
Anthropology from Harvard University
in 1967 and retired as Dean of the Graduate
School at Salem State College (MA) in 2001. Since that time she has
been a Museum Scholar at the Museum of African
American History in Boston.
This essay derives from her introduction to a new edition
of William Cooper Nell’s The
Colored Patriots of the American Revolution
that she is preparing for the museum. Click
here to contact
Dr. Marion Kilson.
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