Jul 14, 12:28 PM EDT
How did ex-slave's letter to master come to be?
By ALLEN G. BREED and HILLEL ITALIE
AP National Writers |
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NEW YORK (AP) -- The
photograph, scratched and undated, is captioned "Brother Jordan
Anderson." He is a middle-aged black man with a long beard and a
righteous stare, as if he were a preacher locking eyes with a sinner, or a
judge about to dispatch a thief to the gallows.
Anderson was a former
slave who was freed from a Tennessee plantation by Union troops in 1864 and
spent his remaining 40 years in Ohio. He lived quietly and likely would have
been forgotten, if not for a remarkable letter to his former master published
in a Cincinnati newspaper shortly after the Civil War.
Treasured as a social
document, praised as a masterpiece of satire, Anderson's letter has been
anthologized and published all over the world. Historians teach it, and the
letter turns up occasionally on a blog or on Facebook. Humorist Andy Borowitz
read the letter recently and called it, in an email to The Associated Press,
"something Twain would have been proud to have written."
Addressed to one Col.
Patrick Henry Anderson, who apparently wanted Jordan to come back to the
plantation east of Nashville, the letter begins cheerfully, with the former
slave expressing relief that "you had not forgotten Jordon" (there
are various spellings of the name) and were "promising to do better for
me than anybody else can." But, he adds, "I have often felt uneasy
about you."
He informs the colonel
that he's now making a respectable wage in Dayton, Ohio, and that his
children are going to school. He tallies the monetary value of his services
while on Anderson's plantation - $11,608 - then adds, "we have concluded
to test your sincerity by asking you to send us our wages for the time we
served you."
Turning serious, he
alludes to violence committed against women back in Tennessee and wonders
what would happen to his own family members. "I would rather stay here
and starve - and die, if it come to that - than have my girls brought to
shame by the violence and wickedness of their young masters."
He asks if there are
schools now for blacks. "The great desire of my life now is to give my
children an education, and have them form virtuous habits," he writes.
Then he signs off with
a swift, unforgettable kick.
"Say howdy to
George Carter," he says, "and thank him for taking the pistol from
you when you were shooting at me."
Anderson's words, a
timeless kiss-off to a hated boss, are also a puzzle: How could an illiterate
man, newly released from bondage, produce such a work of sophisticated
satire?
After the letter
resurfaced online earlier this year, along with questions about its
authenticity, The Associated Press sought answers.
From documents
compiled by the AP and in interviews with scholars, Anderson emerges as a
very real person and the very real author of his story - though, from the
beginning, it was reported to have been "dictated." His letter is
an outstanding, but not unique, testament to the ability of slaves to turn
horror into humor.
"The sly irony is
very much in the Mark Twain style," Twain biographer Ron Powers says of
the letter, especially the request for unpaid wages. "Whammo."
"It is that
wonderful combination of serious thought and satirical chastisement,"
says Yale University history professor David Blight, who loves to read the
letter during a lecture class on Reconstruction. "It represents so many
definitions of freedom - dignity, access to education, family. And in the
end, it also meant wages."
According to available
records, Jordan Anderson was born somewhere in Tennessee around 1825 and by
age 7 or 8 had been sold to a plantation owned by Gen. Paulding Anderson in
Big Spring, Tenn. Patrick Henry Anderson was one of the general's sons and,
by the mid-1840s owned Jordan and other slaves. Jordan Anderson married
Amanda McGregor in 1848 and they apparently had 11 children.
Union troops camped on
the plantation, and Jordan was freed in 1864 by the Provost-Marshall-General
of the Department of Nashville.
Roy E. Finkenbine, a
professor at the University of Detroit-Mercy who is planning a biography of
Anderson, thinks it's likely Jordan was given to Patrick (born in 1823) as a
playmate and personal servant when they were young. According to the 1860
slave schedules in the U.S. Census, Patrick had five "slave houses"
totaling 32 people - 19 males and 13 females.
While the schedules
don't list the slaves by name, there were two men, aged 34 and 35, who would
have been about the age Jordan was in 1860. Finkenbine says Jordan appears to
have been the oldest male slave of working age, and that might be why the
plantation owner was so eager to entice him back. Many of the slaves had
fled, and Anderson was mortgaged to the hilt.
"Harvest is
coming on. Jordan's a guy who's played ... sort of a quasi-managerial role in
the past," he says. "And if he can convince this guy to come back,
here's a guy who can not only maybe get the harvest in, but convince some of
these other slaves that have gone ..., get them to come back and be workers
on the plantation. It's kind of his last-ditch effort to save it."
But he doesn't save
it. In September 1865, Finkenbine says, Anderson sold the nearly 1,000-acre
estate to his attorney for a pittance, in an apparent attempt to get out from
under his crushing debt. Just two years later, Patrick Henry Anderson died at
the age of 44.
That's what's known of
the famous letter's recipient. What of its writer?
Jordan Anderson's
collaborator - to whom he reportedly dictated the letter - was a Dayton
banker named Valentine Winters. An abolitionist who once hosted Abraham
Lincoln at his mansion, Winters regarded the letter as excellent propaganda,
according to Finkenbine. It was originally published in August 1865 by the
Cincinnati Commercial, a paper with Republican leanings.
Jordan likely made his
way to Dayton with the help of Winters' son-in-law, Dr. Clarke McDermont, the
surgeon in charge of the Cumberland Military Hospital in Nashville, where
both Jordan and Mandy worked for a time, says Finkenbine, who places Jordan
and his family in Dayton by August 1864. Anderson becomes an employee and
tenant of Winters.
McDermont expressed
concern for the former slaves working as nurses and orderlies and laundresses
at the hospital. "And he actually writes back and forth to both his
father-in-law and some of the other abolitionists in Dayton, saying, `Can you
raise money for these people? Can you send clothing for these people? `"
Finkenbine says.
Anderson's letter
comes right out of the life he had survived. From the insanity of slavery, he
and others developed a deadpan, absurdist take that revealed their feelings
to each other and hid them from their masters.
"Slaves had to be
guarded as to what they said because they would be punished if caught
critiquing or offending the master class - thus they developed sophisticated
forms of indirection and other forms of masking," says Glenda Carpio, a
professor of African and African-American studies at Harvard University and
author of "Laughing Fit to Kill: Black Humor in the Fictions of
Slavery."
Anderson's letter is
special in part, Carpio says, because it was written down. Until late in the
19th century, when Joel Chandler Harris' Br'er Rabbit tales were first
published, slave humor was essentially an oral tradition. And while
newspapers sometimes printed letters to former masters, Finkenbine notes, few
were "so challenging" as Anderson's.
"Most were rather
supplicating," he says.
Powers finds the
letter's tone curious, because Anderson "seems to veer back and forth
between irony and aching earnestness. " Twain, he adds, would have given
the letter a vernacular voice, as he did in such pieces as "Sociable
Jimmy" and "A True Story Just as I Heard It." Anderson's
diction, meanwhile, "is pretty much standard English."
The letter was soon
reprinted by Lydia Maria Child in her "Freedmen's Book," used by
schools in the South for former slaves. Other anti-slavery newspapers in the
U.S. published it, and Finkenbine says he has found instances of Anderson's
letter appearing as far away as Switzerland, where it was translated into
French.
Notes on some of these
publications state that Jordan dictated the letter verbatim to Valentine
Winters, and that Winters is the one submitting it for publication.
Regarding questions
about whether the letter was really Anderson's, Finkenbine says: "It's
kind of a racist assumption ... that when someone is illiterate, we make the
assumption they're stupid." Enslaved people had deep folk wisdom and a
rich oral culture, he adds. "Why would we think that he hadn't been
thinking about these things and couldn't dictate them to willing
abolitionists?"
"I think the
letter is clearly his ideas and, for the most part, his own words" -
though Winters probably had "some minor role in shaping the
language."
In a 2006 speech at a
conference on slavery reparations, historian Raymond Winbush retold the story
of Anderson's letter. He also revealed that he had tracked down some of
Patrick Henry Anderson's descendants, still living in Big Spring.
"What's amazing
is that the current living relatives of Col. Anderson are still angry at
Jordan for not coming back," knowing that the plantation was in serious
disrepair after the war, said Winbush, director of the Institute for Urban
Research at Maryland's Morgan State University.
As a boy, Jewell
Wilson, Jordan Anderson's great-grandson, lived with Jordan's daughter Jane
and remembers some of her stories from the plantation.
"She said that
there was a (white) girl there who was about her age," says the
87-year-old Wilson, who still lives in Dayton. "And they would whup her
for trying to teach my grandma to read and write."
Jane could have been
talking about Col. Anderson's daughter, Martha. Likely the "Miss
Martha" to whom Jordan refers in his letter, she would have been around
14 when the black Anderson family left Big Spring.
"She said they
came here one time looking for Anderson to take him back," he says.
"They wanted him because he was such a good worker and everything. But
he said, `I'm free now. I don't have to go back there.'"
According to probate
records, Jordan Anderson died on April 15, 1905. While Wilson has no oral
history about the letter's authorship, he has no problem believing that it
reflects his great-grandfather's thoughts.
"They said he was
smart." And he succeeded in educating his children.
Jordan's son, Dr.
Valentine Winters Anderson, was a close friend of African-American poet Paul
Laurence Dunbar. The two collaborated on the Dayton Tattler, the city's first
black newspaper.
Among Dunbar's works
is a 1904 story titled "The Wisdom of Silence." In it, a freed
slave named Jeremiah Anderson rebuffs his former master's attempts to woo him
back to the plantation.
"No, suh, I's
free, an' I sholy is able to tek keer o' myse'f," the freedman in
Dunbar's story declares. "I done been fattenin' frogs fu' othah people's
snakes too long."
|
Friday, February 23, 2018
A LETTER FROM AN (EX)SLAVE
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