The Black Newspaper and the Chosen Nation
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The Black Newspaper and the Chosen Nation shows how antebellum African Americans used the newspaper as a means for translating their belief in black “chosenness” into plans and programs for black liberation. During the decades leading up the Civil War, the idea that God had marked black Americans as his chosen people on earth became a central article of faith in northern black communities, with black newspaper editors articulating it in their journals.
Benjamin Fagan shows how the early black press helped shape the relationship between black chosenness and the struggles for black freedom and equality in America, in the process transforming the very notion of a chosen American nation. Exploring how cultures of print helped antebellum black Americans apply their faith to struggles grand and small, The Black Newspaper and the Chosen Nation uses the vast and neglected archive of the early black press to shed new light on many of the central figures and questions of African American studies.
Benjamin Fagan
BENJAMIN FAGAN is an associate professor of English at Auburn University. He is the author of The Black Newspaper and the Chosen Nation (Georgia). He is also the editor of the forthcoming African American Literature in Transition, 1830–1850.
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The Black Newspaper and the Chosen Nation - Benjamin Fagan
The Black Newspaper and the Chosen Nation
The Black Newspaper and the Chosen Nation
BENJAMIN FAGAN
A Sarah Mills Hodge Fund Publication
This publication is made possible in part through a grant
from the Hodge Foundation in memory of its founder,
Sarah Mills Hodge, who devoted her life to the relief and
education of African Americans in Savannah, Georgia.
© 2016 by the University of Georgia Press
Athens, Georgia 30602
www.ugapress.org
All rights reserved
Set in Minion Pro by Graphic Composition, Inc., Bogart, GA
Printed and bound by Sheridan Books
The paper in this book meets the guidelines for
permanence and durability of the Committee on
Production Guidelines for Book Longevity of the
Council on Library Resources.
Most University of Georgia Press titles are
available from popular e-book vendors.
Printed in the United States of America
20 19 18 17 16 C 5 4 3 2 1
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Fagan, Benjamin author.
Title: The black newspaper and the chosen nation / Benjamin Fagan.
Description: Athens : The University of Georgia Press, 2016. | Includes bibliographical references and index.
Identifiers: LCCN 2015037495 | ISBN 9780820349404 (hardcover : alk. paper) | ISBN 9780820349398 (e-book)
Subjects: LCSH: African American press—History—19th century. | African American newspapers—History—19th century. | Press and politics—United States—History—19th century.
Classification: LCC PN4882.5 .F35 2016 | DDC 071.3089/96073—dc23 LC record available at http://lccn.loc.gov/2015037495
For my parents. All of them.
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction. The Records of Black Chosenness
Chapter 1. Acting Chosen
Chapter 2. Prophecies for a Chosen Nation
Chapter 3. Revolutionary Chosenness
Chapter 4. The Limits of Black Chosenness
Chapter 5. Joining the Chosen Army
Conclusion. The Ends of Black Chosenness
Notes
Index
Acknowledgments
This book has been inspired and supported by numerous individuals and institutions, and I am grateful for the opportunity to name and thank them here. Deborah McDowell not only first suggested that I explore the archive of early black newspapers and guided this project from its inception but also taught me through her example what it means to be an ethical scholar. For that lesson, especially, I will always be grateful. Eric Lott, Anna Brickhouse, and Matthew Hedstrom all helped shape this project from its beginnings, and I continue to rely upon their guidance and support. Kathleen Diffley first introduced me to periodicals when I was a student in her undergraduate seminar, and I am grateful to now be able to count her as a dear friend. A community of scholars working in and around black print culture studies has inspired and encouraged me throughout this project. For their example and support I would like to thank John Ernest, P. Gabrielle Foreman, Eric Gardner, Joycelyn Moody, and Carla Peterson. And while I know her only through her scholarship, I owe a profound debt of gratitude to Frances Smith Foster for her pathbreaking work.
A number of institutions have provided crucial support for this project. A fellowship at the Carter G. Woodson Institute for African American and African Studies at the University of Virginia allowed me to finish my dissertation, and the Visiting Scholars program at the American Academy of Arts and Sciences provided me with invaluable resources as I began the book manuscript. A Joyce Tracy Fellowship from the American Antiquarian Society allowed me to conduct essential research for this project, and a Robert C. and Sandra Connor Fellowship from the University of Arkansas assisted with important travel. I am deeply grateful to the National Endowment for the Humanities for giving me the opportunity to spend a semester at the Library Company of Philadelphia, where I completed this project. In visiting a variety of institutions, I have acquired debts to a long list of incredible people. For their friendship and support, I want to especially thank Paul Erickson at the American Antiquarian Society; Marlon Ross and Cheryll Lewis at the Carter G. Woodson Institute; James Green, Krystal Appiah, Linda August, Connie King, and Charlene Knight at the Library Company of Philadelphia; and Patricia Meyer Spacks, Mary Maples Dunn, and John Tessitore at the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
A much earlier version of chapter 2 appeared first as an article in American Periodicals 21, no. 2 (Fall 2011): 97–119; and a section of chapter 4 first appeared in African American Review 47, no. 1 (Spring 2014): 51–67 (copyright © 2014 St. Louis University and The Johns Hopkins University Press). I would like to thank the Ohio State University Press and the Johns Hopkins University Press, respectively, for permission to include revised versions of those articles in this book. I would also like to thank the New York Public Library, the Library Company of Philadelphia, and the Library and Archives Canada for permission to include images from their holdings.
Feedback from numerous friends and colleagues has made this a vastly better book. I am especially grateful to Patricia Meyer Spacks for her careful attention to this manuscript in its early stages and also for her encouragement that I write a very different kind of book than I had originally intended. A Mellon-Sawyer workshop at the Robert Penn Warren Center for the Humanities at Vanderbilt University provided an invaluable opportunity for me to share my work, and I am grateful to Richard Blackett, Teresa Goddu, and Jane Landers for organizing this workshop. I would also like to thank the fellows at the Woodson Institute, American Antiquarian Society, American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and Library Company of Philadelphia for their attention to my work in progress. At the University of Arkansas, the English faculty writing group, organized by Vivian Davis, provided invaluable suggestions; and conversations with Calvin White and James Gigantino, friends and colleagues in African and African American Studies, helped me better understand the stakes of my project. Robin Bernstein, whom I first met while I was just beginning this work, always took the time to answer questions big and small and provided me with key insights at a critical late stage of the manuscript. I am grateful to Heike Paul and Nicole Waller for inviting me to share my work with audiences at the University of Nurnberg-Erlangen and the University of Potsdam. For graciously agreeing to read sections of my manuscript I would like to thank John Barnard, Kathleen Diffley, Eric Gardner, Teresa Goddu, Matthew Hedstrom, Brian Roberts, Matthew Rubery, Martha Schoolman, Jolie Sheffer, Janice Simon, and Derrick Spires. I would also like to thank Walter Biggins, Jon Davies, and Beth Snead at the University of Georgia Press for shepherding this project to publication, and Kay Kodner for her meticulous copyediting. I am deeply indebted to Trish Loughran and an anonymous reader for the press, both of whom offered invaluable feedback on my proposal and sample chapters as well as the completed manuscript.
I could not have completed this project without my family. To my father Jack and stepmother Sharon, sister Kara and brother Derek, late mother Elaine and her partner Roberta, I owe a debt of love and gratitude that can never be repaid. But I’ll keep trying. Finally, I would like to thank Juliane Braun, my partner in all things, without whom none of this would be possible.
The Black Newspaper and the Chosen Nation
Introduction
THE RECORDS OF BLACK CHOSENNESS
We lead the forlorn hope of Human Equality, let us tell of its onslaught on the battlements of hate and caste, let us record its triumphs in a Press of our own.
—Report of the Committee on a National Press,
1847
On October 6, 1847, nearly seventy black men gathered in Troy, New York, for the National Convention of Colored People. While most hailed from the northeastern states, delegates arrived from as far west as Michigan and as far south as Kentucky. For four days, attendees discussed issues of education, commerce, agriculture, and, of course, the Best means to Abolish Slavery and Caste in the United States.
¹ But before taking up any of these crucial questions, delegates engaged in a fierce debate over the report from the Committee on a National Press. The committee, led by James McCune Smith, called for the creation of a national
newspaper through which,
McCune Smith imagined, at any and all times the voice of the Colored People may be heard.
² Some in attendance, though, worried that a designated national newspaper could not be sustained. Thomas Van Rensselaer, for example, feared that the undertaking was too great to be carried into successful operation.
³ Others expressed concerns that, if successful, such an organ would make it appear that the opinions of a few constituted a national consensus. Arguing this point, Frederick Douglass contended that a Paper started as a National organ, would soon dwindle down to the organ of a clique.
⁴ Despite such objections, though, the convention voted overwhelmingly in support of the committee’s report.
The fact that the delegates to the 1847 convention chose to tackle the question of a national newspaper first, and spent nearly one-quarter of the convention passionately debating the subject, underscores the pride of place that the black press occupied in antebellum black activism. Indeed, many of the men who argued over a national newspaper were intimately connected to black newspapers. Thomas Van Rensselaer, for example, edited the Ram’s Horn, and Frederick Douglass had already begun laying the groundwork for his North Star, which he would launch before the end of the year. Recognizing such connections, Henry Highland Garnet, who warmly supported a national organ, coyly expressed surprise that the strongest objections to the new paper came from editors, who are, or are to be,
and sarcastically concluded that [o]f course there was nothing of selfishness in all this.
⁵ Van Rensselaer and Douglass may very well have worried that a national paper would draw support away from their own publications, but many of those arguing for the proposal had similarly strong connections to the black press. Charles B. Ray, one of the strongest proponents for a national paper, had edited the Colored American earlier in the decade, while Garnet himself was a regular contributor to a number of black newspapers. And James McCune Smith, chairman of the Committee on a National Press, served in a variety of roles during a nearly thirty-year engagement with the black press. Exemplary rather than exceptional, such connections illustrate the central role that black newspapers played in antebellum black activism.
The report, produced by the Committee on a National Press, offers a powerful explanation for why antebellum black activists invested so much time and energy in black newspapers. Repeatedly invoking martial metaphors, the report’s authors cast the black press as a key weapon in the war against tyranny and oppression. Black Americans needed a newspaper, they wrote, that shall keep us steadily alive to our responsibilities, which shall constantly point out the principles which should guide our conduct and our labors, which shall cheer us from one end of the land to the other, by recording our acts, our sufferings, our temporary defeats and our steadily approaching triumph—or rather the triumph of the glorious truth ‘Human Equality,’ whose servants and soldiers we are.
⁶ Such an account painted the fight for black liberation in the United States as one front in this war for human equality. By providing a record of the steadily approaching triumph
of black freedom in the United States, then, black newspapers could offer hope and inspiration to all those engaged in this larger cause. For, as the report made clear, black Americans were not merely foot soldiers but indeed stood at the vanguard of the fight for universal freedom. We lead the forlorn hope of Human Equality,
the authors of the report proclaimed, let us tell of its onslaught on the battlements of hate and caste, let us record its triumphs in a Press of our own.
⁷ Newspapers produced by and directed toward black Americans engendered such passionate support, then, because they were the medium that could most effectively speak to and for those who led the fight for freedom and equality.
The report produced by the 1847 Committee on a National Press reflects the fact that many black Americans in the antebellum era connected their commitment to establishing and maintaining black newspapers to their belief that black Americans would lead the world to universal emancipation. Such a claim rested on the belief that God had selected black Americans as his chosen people on Earth. The Black Newspaper and the Chosen Nation tells the story of how a handful of early black newspapers took up, explored, and shaped this faith in black chosenness. The community of black intellectuals and activists who led and contributed to these publications includes the familiar faces of Frederick Douglass and Mary Ann Shadd, as well those of the less-well-known Samuel Cornish, Charles Ray, and Robert and Thomas Hamilton. In addition to their work as abolitionist agitators, doctors, clergymen, and schoolteachers, these individuals each served as an editor of at least one newspaper. Many edited multiple journals. And in the pages of their papers, these editors applied their faith in black chosenness to specific sites of struggle.
But the journals did more than simply act as containers for the ideas of their editors. Rather, the newspapers’ institutional and material forms transformed black chosenness in specific ways, shaping the manner in which editors translated their faith into plans for black liberation. The business of the press brought editors into close contact with printers, publishers, agents, business managers, and correspondents, all of whom had their own visions of chosenness and its relationship to the fight for black freedom and equality. In an issue of a newspaper, an editor collected and arranged the particular voices and viewpoints of the contributors. This chorus provided each newspaper with a distinct personality that transcended the individual ideas of its editor. The Black Newspaper and the Chosen Nation examines the interplay of a black newspaper’s multiple parts, the ways that the voices of its many makers combined and collided, and how the relationship between black chosenness and black freedom evolved through this process.
In exploring and shaping the contours of black chosenness, black newspapers built on and engaged with a project that had begun decades before the birth of the black press in the United States. In an addendum to their 1794 pamphlet defending the conduct of black Philadelphians during an outbreak of yellow fever, for example, Richard Allen and Absalom Jones subtly asserted black chosenness by drawing a typological association between black Americans and God’s original chosen nation, the Israelites. Addressing Those Who Keep Slaves and Uphold the Practice,
the two religious leaders reminded pro-slavery whites that God himself was the first pleader of the cause of slaves,
urging them, [w]hen you are pleaded with, do not you reply as Pharaoh did.
⁸ In his 1810 Dialogue between a Virginian and an African Minister,
the Reverend Daniel Coker made a more explicit claim to black Americans’ divine favor. Toward the conclusion of his pamphlet Coker quoted from the First Epistle of Peter: But ye are a chosen generation, a royal priesthood, and an holy nation.
⁹ For Jones, Allen, and Coker, black Americans’ special status could be used to help convince whites to abandon their support of slavery.
Chosenness was not simply a status to be enjoyed and proclaimed; black religious leaders consistently reminded their brethren that chosenness carried with it a particular set of responsibilities. William Miller built his 1810 sermon celebrating the anniversary of the abolition of the slave trade around a passage from the book of Joel: PRAISE THE NAME OF THE LORD YOUR GOD THAT HATH DEALT WONDERFULLY WITH YOU; AND MY PEOPLE SHALL NEVER BE ASHAMED.
¹⁰ At the conclusion of his remarks, Miller drew the familiar parallel between black Americans and the Israelites as he explained that the words [‘]my people[’] is as applicable to those of us that fear God, as it was to the children of Israel in their most favorable standing with God.
But like that earlier covenanted community, he concluded, "in order to be numbered among the people of God, it behoves [sic] you to be implicit in his commands.¹¹ Two years earlier, during a sermon delivered to celebrate the same occasion, Absalom Jones enumerated some of these commands.
Let our conduct be regulated by the precepts of the gospel, he preached,
let us be sober minded, humble, peaceable, temperate in our meats and drinks, frugal in our apparel and in the furniture of our houses, industrious in our occupations, just in all our dealings, and ever ready to honour all men.¹² Linking such behavior to the fight for black liberation, Jones argued that black Americans had a responsibility to
conduct ourselves in such a manner as to furnish no cause of regret to the deliverers of our nation, for their kindness to us. Acting according to divine precepts, then, was not only a way of giving thanks to God, but also in this case to
our benefactors, who, by enlightening the minds of the rulers of the earth, by means of their publications and remonstrances against the trade in our countrymen, have produced the great event we are this day celebrating."¹³ To be chosen, for men like Miller and Jones, was to act a certain way. And as Jones especially illustrates, many understood acting chosen as a pathway to black liberation.
Appeals to the special mission and attendant responsibilities of black Americans dovetailed with similar claims to chosenness that white colonists had been making since the seventeenth century. Chosenness became, for white Americans, the foundation of American exceptionalism. In 1630, for example, John Winthrop famously reminded his fellow New England colonists that they had entered into covenant
with God to create a new holy civilization, a city upon a hill,
that would inspire the world. A century later, Jonathan Edwards saw the First Great Awakening as the dawning, or at least a prelude of that glorious work of God, so often foretold in scripture, which, in the progress and issue of it, shall renew the world of mankind,
and surmised that there are many things that make it probable that this work will begin in America.
¹⁴ Indeed, he concluded, "[t]his new world is probably now discovered, that the new and most glorious state of God’s church on earth might commence there; that God might in it begin a new world in a spiritual respect, when he creates the new heavens and new earth.¹⁵ In the early national period, preachers and politicians transferred claims of American chosenness onto the United States. Casting U.S. Americans as akin to the biblical Israelites, one New England clergyman christened the new nation
God’s American Israel, while another imagined that
God hath graciously patronized our cause and taken us under his special care, as he did his ancient covenant people.¹⁶ And in his first inaugural address, Thomas Jefferson assured his fellow citizens that they lived in a
chosen country.¹⁷ American preachers and politicians thus developed their arguments for an exceptionalism limited to the United States, one that cast the nation-state as the
city on a hill" for the rest of the world to aspire to and admire through an existing tradition of American chosenness. And in the early nineteenth century alone, this state-specific American exceptionalism was invoked to justify a range of policies including westward expansion, Indian removal, and racial slavery.¹⁸
Black chosenness could also appeal to American exceptionalism. But, especially in the antebellum period, black activists rarely accepted the United States as an extension of the American chosen nation. In 1854, for instance, the black activist, author, and newspaper editor Martin Delany proclaimed that the continent of America was designed by Providence as a reserved asylum for the various oppressed people of the earth, of all races.
¹⁹ Delany made this claim in the course of advocating for black emigration from the United States to Central and South America. His continent of America,
then, extended beyond the boundaries of the United States. Moreover, Delany set up an opposition between an America
providentially designed for the oppressed of all races
and a U.S. American identity rooted in slavery and white supremacy.
In casting God’s chosen people as oppressed Americans, and the United States as their oppressor, Delany picked up on a central theme of black chosenness. As black activists would argue throughout the antebellum era, the suffering that black Americans endured in the United States solidified their connection to the biblical Israelites and thus confirmed their status as God’s new chosen nation. Rather than God’s American Israel,
black Americans often recognized the United States as an American Egypt.²⁰ And many, as the activist and religious leader Maria Stewart articulated in an 1833 address, detected a powerful resemblance between the United States, a seller of slaves and the souls of men,
and the great city of Babylon.
²¹ Through a variety of biblical typologies, then, theories of black chosenness upended the dominant reading of the United States as the New Jerusalem and, in the process, transformed the very notion of a chosen American nation.
Black chosenness also at times involved a distinctly black exceptionalism that offered an alternative to exceptionalist understandings of the United States or even America more broadly conceived. Being chosen, for some black writers and orators, meant that black people possessed superior gifts and talents that they were destined to share with the world. In his 1854 remarks, for example, Delany contended that in the true principles of morals, correctness of thought, religion, and law or civil government, there is no doubt but the black race will yet instruct the world.
²² Eight years later, in a speech on Negro Self-Respect and Pride of Race,
T. Morris Chester assured his listeners that black Americans will eventually radiate this continent with our moral and intellectual grandeur.
²³ The mark of chosenness, in these readings, was not primarily residence in a certain location or participation in a particular political entity, but rather membership in the black race.
Being black, more than any other factor, qualified one to be a part of God’s chosen nation. This form of black exceptionalism claimed blackness as the marker of chosenness and, by extension, of a special destiny to lead the world to holy perfection.
As the 1847 committee report suggests, black newspapers had a special role to play in the development and transmission of black chosenness. For, while black men and women continued to produce a variety of printed materials throughout the antebellum period, from 1827 on black newspapers became, as Eric Gardner writes, "the central publication outlet for many black writers."²⁴ Beyond providing a space for black writing, the black newspaper offered antebellum black Americans an outlet in the most important medium of their era. Noting the ubiquity of the newspaper in the United States, a British visitor in the mid-1840s remarked that [o]n board the steamer and on the rail, in the counting-house and the hotel, in the street and in the private dwelling, in the crowded thoroughfare and in the remotest rural district, he is ever sure of finding the newspaper.
²⁵ Recognizing the power that this potential reach endowed upon a newspaper, the leaders of Pennsylvania’s 1841 Colored Convention declared that newspapers tend to impart the same sentiments and the same views to all who read them,
and as a result "bring as it were into