Journals of 2 Ex-Slaves Draw Vivid Portraits

If you haven’t already done so, check out the New York Times’ article about the soon to be published journals by two ex-slaves. (Link via Dana’s Lincoln Didn’t Free The Slaves post) As usual, I’ve ’emancipated’ the text below.

Journals of 2 Ex-Slaves Draw Vivid Portraits
By RANDY KENNEDY

Published: June 14, 2004

The scene sounds like one conjured up by a screenwriter for a Civil War epic. As the Union Army converges on Richmond in 1862 and white residents frantically pack their silver, a group of slaves gathers in a hotel tavern after closing time. The slave in charge of the tavern, John Washington, pours the others drinks, and they all cheerfully toast to “the Yankees’ health.”

The scene is not from a movie. It is from an account that Mr. Washington wrote in 1873 and whose existence few people even knew of until the last few months. But through a series of coincidences, his handwritten autobiography and another powerful unpublished narrative much like it, by a former Alabama slave named Wallace Turnage, have surfaced and come to the attention of a Yale historian, David W. Blight, who calls them “altogether remarkable.”

The narratives are likely to generate great interest in the academic world, in part because they speak to a lively debate in recent slavery studies: to what degree did Lincoln emancipate the slaves, and to what degree were they already emancipating themselves as the war ravaged the South? Mr. Washington and Mr. Turnage liberated themselves during the war, stealing away from their masters by rowboat, at great risk. But both were taken in by the Union Army, without whose help they might have been recaptured.

“What these narratives demonstrate in authentic and rich detail is that slaves became free by both means,” Dr. Blight said.

The publishing world will probably also be eager for the stories, especially after the success of “The Bondwoman’s Narrative,” an autobiographical novel written in the 1850’s by a slave, Hannah Crafts, who made her way to freedom. That narrative, discovered and edited by the Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates Jr., became a best seller in 2002.

Dr. Blight plans to publish the newly discovered narratives together, along with his research into the lives of their unsung authors.

The Turnage narrative was completely unknown to scholars until last year. For many years it was kept in a cluttered bureau drawer in the Greenwich, Conn., home of Mr. Turnage’s daughter, Lydia Turnage Connolly, who died in 1984 at the age of 99.

His story, written on blue-lined paper in a leather-bound notebook, probably sometime in the late 19th century, ended up with a neighbor, Gladys Watt, who discovered only by reading it that Mrs. Connolly was a former slave’s daughter. Mrs. Connolly often described herself as “Portugee” to explain her dark complexion; it is very likely, Dr. Blight says, that the fathers of both Mr. Turnage and Mr. Washington were white slaveholders.

Mrs. Watt kept the notebook in a closet for years, in a clamshell archival box, unsure what to do with it. And then last summer she took it to the Historical Society of the Town of Greenwich, where Dr. Blight later gave a lecture.

“They asked me to take a look at it,” he said in an interview last week near the Yale campus, smiling and admitting that because he was so busy at the time, “I really wasn’t paying that much attention at first.”

But after the Washington manuscript was brought to his attention last winter, Dr. Blight realized the rarity of both manuscripts and their value in the emancipation debate.

The two narratives are also significant because, unlike many other such accounts, there is a wealth of genealogical information about the former slaves’ lives that corroborates much of what they wrote.

After the Turnage narrative was donated to the Greenwich historical society, the group hired two researchers to make sure it was authentic. “This is such a vivid and amazing story, the first thing we wanted to do was make sure it was not a fake,” said Debra Mecky, the society’s executive director. The researchers found that much of Mr. Turnage’s account could be verified in census, Army and bank records.

About 120 autobiographical narratives were published by freed slaves before the Civil War, the most famous of which were Frederick Douglass’s. Another 100 or so were published after the war.

But discoveries of new ones, especially those by slaves telling the story of their own emancipation, are very rare. Dr. Blight said that only a half-dozen or so exist, most housed at the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture in Harlem. It is unclear whether Mr. Washington, who died in Massachusetts in 1918, or Mr. Turnage, who died in New Jersey in 1916, ever tried to publish his account during his lifetime.

“It is very exciting,” said Randall K. Burkett, curator of African American collections at the Robert W. Woodruff Library at Emory University in Atlanta. “The thing that’s really exciting to me about these is that the provenance of both is so clear.”

Records show that Mr. Turnage went on to live a long and rich life after the war, some of it in New York City. For many years, according to the research of Christine G. McKay, one of the researchers hired by the Greenwich group, Mr. Turnage worked as a waiter, janitor and glass blower in Manhattan. In the 1870’s he lived in the neighborhood then known as Little Africa — today’s Greenwich Village and SoHo. He later moved to Jersey City, but he is buried in the Cypress Hills Cemetery in Brooklyn.

The Washington narrative was kept for many years by his granddaughter, Evelyn Washington Easterly, who briefly gave it to the Library of Congress in 1976. Before she died Mrs. Easterly gave it to a close friend, Alice Jackson Stuart, a college English professor who intended to publish it herself and spent some time at Harvard in the mid-1980’s doing research related to it. But Professor Stuart died in 2001 with her work unfinished.

The narrative then went to her son, Julian T. Houston, a Massachusetts Superior Court judge, who lent it to the Massachusetts Historical Society for safekeeping. Judge Houston, who writes fiction, later talked to his agent, Wendy Strothman, about the narrative. Late last year she helped find Dr. Blight, who has written extensively on slavery and was recently chosen to direct the Gilder Lehrman Center for the Study of Slavery, Resistance and Abolition at Yale.

While both narratives are gripping and often painful to read, Mr. Washington’s demonstrates more writerly flair. Dr. Blight said that one of his jobs would be to try to determine the literary influences on both men. It is clear that both knew the Bible, but it also seems as if they may have been familiar with Frederick Douglass. (In one scene in the account by Mr. Turnage, he describes wrestling for two hours with a brutal overseer, echoing a famous account in which Douglass describes his own two-hour fight with an overseer.)

Mr. Washington’s story is shot through with dry humor. Immediately after the scene in which he describes toasting the Yankees, he tells how his mistress, in tears, implores him to escape from Richmond with her into the countryside.

He writes: ” `Yes madam,’ I replied. `I will come right back directly.’ ” He had no intention of returning; instead he made his way to the Rappahannock River, where he rowed to freedom among Union troops.

In a motif that shows up repeatedly in such narratives, he also writes in great detail about how he learned to read and write. Mr. Washington writes that while cleaning a room in his master’s house, he would read — though “imperfectly,” he says — Harper’s magazine. Two boys who were friends of his master’s family helped him learn to spell, he adds. Teaching a slave to read or write in the antebellum South was a crime, often severely punished.

Mr. Turnage’s story tells much more of the brutality of slavery, because most of his years of bondage were spent as a field hand in Alabama. He writes of near-crippling lashings of female slaves and describes four unsuccessful attempts to escape, some of them followed by severe beatings, before he finally succeeded in 1864 after hiding in a swamp for a week.

While hiding, he often slept in an unused Confederate lookout perch. One morning, he writes, as if he were witnessing a miracle, he saw the tide bring something in.

“Now when I got down there I seen a little boat very small indeed though the tide was going out,” he says. “It stood like it was held by an invisible hand; so I got in the little boat and it held me.”

A few hours later, as a storm threatened to drown him, he was pulled over the side of a Union gunboat by eight soldiers — and finally “had obtained that freedom which I desired so long.”

He ends his story with a stern command to his readers not to regard his account as a “novel, nor a fable, but a reality of facts.”

“My reader,” he adds, “I will now leave my book to your judgement. The end.”


In Their Own Written Words

Published: June 14, 2004

Following are excerpts from the Washington narrative:

The night before mother left me, (as I was to be kept in hand by the old Mistress for especial use) she, Mother, came up to my little room I Slept in the “white people’s house” and laid down on my bed by me and begged me for her own Sake, try and be a good boy, Say my prayers every night, remember all she had tried to teach me, and always think of her.

Her tears mingled with mine amid kisses and heart felt sorrow. She tucked the Bed cloths around me, and bade me good night. Bitter pangs filled my heart and thought I would rather die on the morrow mother and sisters and brother all would leave me alone in this wide world to battle with temptations trials and hardship.

Who then could I complain to when I was persecuted? Who then would come early the cold Winter morning and call me up and help me do my hard tasks?

Whose hand (patting) me upon the head would Sooth my early trials.

Then and there my hatred was kindled Secretly again my oppressors, and I promised myself if ever I got an opporteunity I would run away from these devlish Slave holders.

From the Turnage narrative:

Well the overseer began to weigh the cotton, and when he got around to them that didn’t have cotton enough he told them to stand back until he got through weighing cotton and he would see what was the reason they could not pick more cotton. So when he got around to me he told me to stand back with the rest of them and he would see why I couldn’t pick more cotton. Well when he got through weighing cotton, he took his cowhide and made one of the women lay down, and pulled her clothes over her head and made the other woman hold her and her clothes over her head. He give that woman about two hundred lashes and I thought that was enough except he was going to kill her. I could see the skin fly near about every lick he struck her. Then he made the woman that held the one he had whiped lay down and made the one he had whiped hold her clothes over her head. Then I thought if that was the kind of whipings he gave them I would not stay and take mine. So I saw my chance while he was whiping to make my escape, so I left. . . . I could hear him calling me, but I would not come back. So I was then in the woods with the wild animals and only about fifteen years of age. I suffered very much for some thing to eat.