YALE UNIVERSITY LIBRARY From the library of Walter White UNSUNG HEROES Copyright 1921 By Elizabeth Ross Haynes UNSUNG HEROES BY ELIZABETH ROSS HAYNES NEW YORK DU BOIS AND DILL, PUBLiaHERS 1921 Dedicated to my Alma Mater Fisk University Nashville, Tennessee CONTENTS Chapter Foreword Page 7 I Frederick Douglass 11 II Paul Laurence Dunbar 41 III Booker T. Washington 63 IV Harriet Tubman 87 V Alexander S. Pushkin 105 VI Blanche Kelso Bruce . 117 VII Samuf.t, Coleridge-Taylor . 127 VIII Benjamin Banneker 153 IX Phillis Wheatley . 167 X Toussaint L'Ouverture 181 XI Josiah Henson .... 191 XII Sojourner Truth 209 XIII Crispus Attucks 229 XIV Alexandre Dumas . 237 XV Paul Cuffe 249 XVI Alexander Crummell . 263 XVII John Mercer Langston 269 ILLUSTRATIONS Page Frederick Douglass 10 C. Thorpe Booker T. Washington 62 C. Thorpe She told her hearers thrilling stories 86 Laura Wheeler "My children, choose your duty" . . 180 Marcellus Hawkins Crispus Attucks spoke against the British soldiers 228 Hilda Rue Wilkinson Paul Cuffe 's brig 248 C. Thorpe Foreword IN casting about for stories to read to a Httle friend, one day I drew from the Library "My Life and Times" by Frederick Douglass. I knew that the book was written for grown-ups and that it contained many pages, but I did not know that in it was bound up a world of inspira tion; for I had never read the book, although I had spent five years in college and university. This story and the other stories in "Unsung Heroes", telling of the victories in spite of the hardships and struggles of Negroes whom the world has failed to sing about, have so inspired me, even after I am grown, that I pass them on to you, my httle friends. May you with all of your years ahead of you be so inspired by them that you will succeed in spite of all odds, that you will "Go on and up ! Our souls and eyes Shall follow thy continuous rise ; Our ears shall list thy story From bards who from thy root shall spring, And proudly tune their lyres to sing Of Ethiopia's glory." Washington, D. C, The Author. April 10, 1921. FREDERICK DOUGLASS Frederick Douglass Chapter I FREDERICK DOUGLASS The Orator and Abolitionist 1817-1895 TUC KAH OE is the name of a plantation on the eastern shore of Maryland. It was once known for its worn-out, flat, sandy soil; for its old, poorly-kept fields and fences, and for its stupid and ignorant people. On one side of this plantation flowed a lazy, muddy river, bringing with it, as some believed, ague and fever. At some distance from the river bank stood rows of log cabins suggestive of a quaint village whose only streets are the trodden footpaths and whose only street lights are the moon and the stars. The cabins aU looked very much alike except one which stood off to itself. Each one of these cabins had a door but no window, a dirt floor, a fence-rail loft for a bed, and a ladder by which to reach it. And each had a clay chimney with a broad open fireplace and just a block of wood at the door for steps. In this little log-cabin village, called "the quarters" lived the slaves. Nearly every morning, just at peep of day, the cabin doors were unfastened and people began to stir imtil "the quarters" were almost like a bee- [11] 12 ] UNSUNG HEROES hive. Men, women, and children large enough to work were getting ready to go to the fields nearby. Some with their smoking clay or corn-cob pipes in their mouths were jumping astride the bare backs of mules or horses. Some were beginning to ride off without a sound other than that of the jingle of gear and the beat of hoofs. Still others followed. Now and then a woman hastened to the lone cabin which stood off from "the quarters", pull ing by the hand a child or two, or carrying them in her arms. She tarried at this cabin, presided over by "Grandma" Betsy Bailey, just long enough to leave her little children and then hastened on to the field. Grandma Betsy, an active old fisherwoman, fed the children just as a man feeds his pigs. After placing the mush in a little trough, she set the trough either down on the dirt floor or out in the yard. Then she waved her hand to the children, who made a rush for the trough, each with a little piece of board or an oyster shell in his hand for a spoon. Some of them, without seeming to rush, tried to eat faster than the others, but Aunt Betsy had only to cut a sharp eye at such offenders. She never thought of trying to call any one of them by name except her own grandson, Freder- FREDERICK DOUGLASS [13 iek Augustus Washington Bailey. Children on the Tuckahoe plantation were not supposed to have names or to know about their ages. Neither were they supposed to know the names of the days of the week or the months of the year, or to know anything at all about time. Frederick thought much of Grandma Betsy's cabin, of the eating trough, of his bed in the loft by her side, and of the potato hole in front of her cabin fireplace. Little thought of his age or of any separation from his grandma ever entered his mind. Grandma Betsy, however, spent a part of each day thinking especially of his age and the time when he would be separated from her. She had already begun to picture the circum stances of their separation. One day she said to herself as she sat patting her foot: "Freddie is just about seven years old now. I know old Mas ter will soon be sending some one down from the 'Great House' for him". She waited and looked and listened for days but no one came. She was beginning to wonder where old Master was, when suddenly one Friday afternoon he came down himself and gave orders for Frederick to be car ried away the next day. Grandma Betsy simply curtsied, saying, "Yes sir. Master, yes sir". On this particular afternoon she was engaged 14 ] UNSUNG HEROES in mending her net for fishing. She finished her task at the close of the day, and early that night she climbed the ladder leading to the bed in the loft of the cabin with tears trickling down her cheeks. She lay down on her bed by the side of Frederick, but instead of going to sleep she lay there thinking, thinking, thinking. Finally the comforting words of an old plantation melody came to her mind. She began singing it to herself just above a whisper: A little talk with Jesus makes it right, aU right. A little talk with Jesus makes it right, all right. Troubles of every kind — Thank God, we always find A little talk with Jesus makes it right. Over and over again she sang it imtil she dozed off into a light slumber. Suddenly the straws on her rail bed seemed to stick her and the hard rails seemed to push up through the rags and hurt her sides. She tm-ned and twisted and opened her eyes, but refused to admit to herself that she was restless until again she began to sing over and over the melody : A little talk with Jesus makes it right, all right. The singing finally died away and all was quiet. The next morning Grandma Betsy rose even earlier than usual and went about her work. Fred- FREDERICK DOUGLASS [15 erick also soon timibled down from the loft with out any thought of a bath or of changing his shirt, for, like the other slave boys, he dressed just once a week and that was Saturday night when he took his bath. On this Saturday morning Grandma Betsy turned about more rapidly than usual and was therefore soon ready to start on her journey. With a white cloth on her head tied in turban style and the stem of her clay pipe between her teeth, she walked out, pulled and fastened the door behind her and stretched out her hand to Frederick who was sitting on the door-step. "Come, Freddie, we are going away today", said she. He looked at her and asked, "Where are we going. Grandma?" She simply shook her head, saying again, "Come on son". Accustomed to obeying, he arose and grasped her hand but seemingly more reluctantly than usual. Out they went. After a time Frederick began to stumble along as the journey lengthened, murmm-ing, "I am tired. Grandma". Grandma Betsy stopped and squatted down. "Get on my shoulders, son", she said. Freddie stepped behind her, placed his little arms around ] 6 j UNSUNG HEROES her neck and with her assistance scrambled up on her shoulders with his legs about her neck. Not another word was spoken. Grandma Betsy rose with her burden and trudged on until Freddie begged her to let him walk again so that she might rest. Finally she squatted down, and Freddie with his tired little limbs almost fell off her shoulders. Grandma Betsy stretched out both her arms. "Whew!" she said. Freddie looked at her then and placed his arms around her as best he could, saying tenderly, "Grandma Betsy, was I heavy? Are you tired? I am so sorry". They continued the journey until they reached the home of Frederick's new master on a plantation twelve miles away. Immediately they went into the kitchen where there were children of all colors, besides Aunt Katie, the cook. The children asked Frederick to come out and play with them but he refused until his grandmother urged him to go. They went out behind the kitchen. Frederick stood around at first as if afraid of the other chil dren. Then he backed up against the kitchen wall and stood there as if he thought the kitchen might run away from him. While he stood there Grand ma Betsy tip-toed out unseen by him. FREDERICK DOUGLASS [17 One of the children came up to him and said, "Fred, Fred, your grandma's gone!" Frederick ran into the house as fast as he could and looked all around for her. Not seeing her, he ran a little way down the road and called her. She did not answer. Then he fell down and began to kick and cry. His brother and two sisters who had formerly been brought there tried to pet him, and to coax him to eat some apples and pears. "No", said he, still kicking, "I want Grandma". There he lay until nightfall, when Avmt Katie came out and told him he must come in. He went in and lay down in the corner, crying and begging to be taken back home. The trip that day, how ever, had made him so tired that he soon fell asleep. The next morning he asked Aunt Katie when Grandma Betsy was coming back to get him. She rolled her eyes and cast such fiery glances at him that Frederick understood and hushed. He had thought of asking for ash-cake like that which Grandma Betsy used to make, but her look drove that out of his mind. Aunt Katie was not long in giving Frederick to imderstand that he was to drive up the cows every evening, keep the yard clean, and wait on Miss Lucretia, his master's daughter. The very first time Frederick went on an errand for Miss 18 ] UNSUNG HEROES Lucretia she smiled and gave him a piece of but tered bread. He smiled, too, from ear to ear, bowed and ran off eating and wondering how she knew that he was so hungry. He always ran smil ing whenever she called him. And when hunger pinched his little stomach hard, he nearly always crept under Miss Lucretia's window and tried to sing like Grandma Betsy: A little talk with Jesus makes it right, all right. A little talk with Jesus makes it right, all right. He knew the next line but scarcely ever had chance to sing it before the window was opened and a piece of buttered bread was handed out to him. One evening during his first summer on this plantation the rain poured down seemingly in sheets. He could not stand under the window and try to sing and he had in some way offended Aimt Katie. She stood at the kitchen table cutting bread for the other children and occasionally brandish ing the knife at Frederick, saying, "I'll starve you, sir". He sat there watching the other chil dren eat, watching Aunt Katie and still keeping one eye on an ear of corn on the shelf by the fire place. He did not lose his first opportunity to seize it and sHp a few grains off the cob into the fire to parch. FREDERICK DOUGLASS [ 19 While he sat there easing the parched grains of corn into his mouth, to his great joy in walked his own mother with a few cakes for him. She caressed him and asked him several questions. Seeing how nearly starved he was, she shook her fist at Aunt Katie and laid down the law to her. Then she tarried with her child for the last time, and even then just a short while — for she knew that she must again walk the twelve miles back to her home before the overseers came out and the horn was blown for field time. Aimt Katie, remembering that stormy evening with Frederick's mother, said to him one day, "Come, Fred, and get a piece of bread. Dip it into this pot liquor". He curtsied first, then eagerly taking the bread, he walked up to the pot and dipped it and his hand as well into the greasy broth. For a few minutes he looked as though he would eat both bread and hand but the ratthng of the dishes in his master's dining-room attracted his attention. He hesitated a moment, then smacked his greasy lips and bowed himself out of the kitchen and around to the side door of the dining-room. Just as he reached the door of the dining-room, a big, grey cat slid in. Frederick slid in too. Im mediately they began to scramble for the crumbs 20 ] UNSUNG HEROES under the table. As soon as these were gobbled up, Frederick rushed into the yard to get some of the bones and scraps which the maid had just thrown out for "Nep", the dog. Clad, winter and summer, in just a tow sack shirt scarcely reaching to his knees, Frederick was as scantily clothed as he was fed. On cold winter days he often stood on the sunny side of the house or in the chimney corner to keep warm. On cold nights he crept into the kitchen closet and got into the meal bag headforemost. In addi tion to these hardships, he often saw his own rela tives and others cruelly beaten. Burdened with such experiences, his childish heart began to long for another place to live. One day, while he was in this unhappy frame of mind, Miss Lucretia called him, saying that within three days he would be sent to Baltimore, to live for a whUe with her brother and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Auld. "You must go to the creek and wash all the dead skin off of your feet and knees," she said to him. "The people in Baltimore are clean. They will laugh at you if you look dirty. You can not put on pants unless you get all the dirt off", she added. Frederick made him self busy, spending most of the three days in the FREDERICK DOUGLASS [ 21 creek, and part of the three nights jumping up to see if the boat was ready to go. The following Saturday morning early, the boat sailed out of the Miles River for Baltimore. It was loaded with a flock of sheep for the market, and a few passengers, among whom was Freder ick. After giving the old plantation a last look, as he thought, he made his way to the bow of the boat and spent the remainder of the day looking ahead. They arrived in Baltimore on Sunday morning. After Frederick had assisted in driving the sheep to the slaughter-house, one of the boat hands went with him to the home of Mr. and Mrs. Auld. Mr. and Mrs. Auld and their little son, Thomas, met Frederick at the door and greeted him heart ily. "Here is your Freddie who will take care of you. Tommy. Freddie, you must be kind to little Tommy", said Mrs. Auld. Frederick smiled and nodded his head. Thomas at once took hold of Frederick's hand and seemingly wished to hurry him into the house to see his toys. The children played until they heard Mrs. Auld begin to read. Frederick stopped playing to listen. Thomas said, "Oh, come on, Freddie, let's play. That is just Mother reading the Bible. She reads it that way every day when Father is away". 22 J UNSUNG HEROES "The Bible? What is that?" asked Frederick, looking at Thomas. Little Thomas, surprised be cause Frederick had never seen a Bible, ushered him into the room where his mother was reading. Thomas knew better than to interrupt his mother while she was reading, but as soon as she stopped, he told her why he had brought Frederick in. Mrs. Auld showed him the Bible, asked him a few ques tions and sent them both out to play. Days passed, but not one when Mrs. Auld failed to read her Bible. Frederick became so in terested in her reading that one day he went to her and asked her to teach him to read. She paused for a while as if in doubt, then she braced up and gave him a lesson. At the end of the lesson his little heart seemed so fuU of joy and thanks that he scarcely knew what to say or do. Mrs. Auld, seeing the situation, said, "Run along now, Frederick. I know you are grateful. Come in at this time every day for your lesson". He made his way out and every day for several days, with beaming face, he went in for his lesson. One day when Mr. Auld came in and saw his wife teaching the boy, he said to her in great sur prise, "My dear, are you reaUy teaching that boy to read? Don't you know he wiU learn to write? Then he will write a pass and run away with him- FREDERICK DOUGLASS [ 23 self". She pleaded for Frederick, but Mr. Auld beat upon the door-facing, saying as he went out, "I will have no more of this nonsense. This must be the end of it". Mrs. Auld dismissed Frederick and seemingly repented of her mistake ; but Fred erick had learned his alphabet. Soon he managed to get a Webster's spelling- book, which he always carried with him when sent on errands. After this, every time he went out, he made new friends until the very boys who at first pounced upon him at every corner, now be gan to help him with his spelling lessons. One day while he was on his way to the shipyard, and just after he had gotten a spelhng lesson at the corner, it occin*red to him that the boys might also help him to learn to write. While he was in the shipyard, he watched the carpenters finish pieces of timber for the different sides of the ships and mark each piece. For in stance, a piece for the larboard side was marked L and a piece for the starboard side was marked S. He soon learned for what these letters stood and how to make them. When he went out on the next errand, he said to the boys, "You can't make as good an /S" as I can make". Such a challenge had to be met. They all dropped down on their knees and began the contest by making letters on 24 J UNSUNG HEROES the pavement. Frederick watched closely and learned to make for the first time many other letters. He kept at it until he leamed to make them all. Then, thinking that he should practice on these letters and learn to make them well, he picked out a flour barrel, without letting any one know what he was doing, and carried it one night into the kitchen loft where he slept. He turned it up side down and propped himself up to it and used it as his desk. Knowing where little Tommy Auld's old copy-books were, he got one out the next day and took it to the loft. That night while the Aulds were asleep he sat'in the loft and wrote between the used lines of the old copy-book. His desire to learn led him into strange paths. One day as he trotted along on his usual errand, with the rain pelting him in the face and over the head, he thought he spied something in the gutter. He stopped suddenly and peeped further into that filthy gutter. There lay some scattered pages of the Bible. He picked them out of the rubbish, took them home and washed and dried them to read. For days after that, when he went out, he kept his eyes on the gutters for something else to read. Finding nothing there, he bought a box of shoe FREDERICK DOUGLASS [ 25 polish and a brush which he always took along on his errands. Whenever he passed any one with rusty boots or shoes on he said, "Shine, Mister, shine ?" By shining boots and saving up carefully, his pennies grew and grew until he had fifty cents. With this he bought a book called the "Columbian Orator", which he read over and over again. At the end of Frederick's seventh year in Bal timore, news came that he would be taken back to the plantation on the Eastern Shore on account of the death of his old master. This news came as a shock especially to him, Mrs. Auld and Thomas. The three of them, fearing that he might never return, wept bitterly. He was away only one month before he was sent back to Baltimore. Another change, however, soon took place which called him back again to the Eastern Shore, where he remained for two years. He was now about sixteen years old, and had to work very hard every day and suffer such pun ishment that he was tired when night came. Yet he wished so much that his fellow slaves might learn to read that he interested a small class of them, which he taught three nights in every week. He also organized a Sunday-school class of about thirty young men. This he taught under an old oak tree in the woods until three class 26 ] UNSUNG HEROES leaders in old master's church rushed in upon them one Sabbath and forbade their meeting. Later on, however, the class was again secretly begim with more than forty pupils, many of whom learned to read. Frederick had been reading the "Columbian Orator" which described the cruelties and injus tices of slavery. He had also been thinking of how to obtain his freedom ; but the pleasant times with his Simday-school class had delayed his tak ing any action in the matter. He had not given up the idea, however, for at the beginning of the year 1836 he made a vow that the year should not end without his trying to gain his freedom. He kept the vow in mind and finaUy told his secret to several of his companions, who agreed to share in a plan to escape. They met often by night and every Simday un til the day set for their escape was at hand. They were hoping that no one would betray them, but just at the last minute the news leaked out. The boys were seized, dragged to town and thrown in prison, where they remained for some time. II For three years after Frederick's release from prison he worked in the fields suffering imtold FREDERICK DOUGLASS [ 27 hardships. The following three years he worked in a shipyard in Baltimore learning the calker's trade. During these last three years his mind was constantly running back to 1817, the year of his birth. Realizing how the years were passing, he was always thinking of some plan of escape. At last he hit upon what seemed to be a real one. With arrangements all made for his escape, he arose early one September morning in 1838, put on a sailor's suit which a friend had lent him and started down to the depot just in time to take the train. He also carried what was called a sailor's protection, which had on it the American eagle. A hackman, whom he knew well, arrived at the depot with his baggage just as the train was about to pull out. Frederick grabbed his baggage, hopped on the train just like a sailor and took a seat. The train moved on slowly until it reached a certain river which had to be crossed by a ferry boat. On this boat there was a workman who insisted on knowing Frederick. He asked Fred erick where he was going and when he was coming back. He persisted in asking questions until Frederick stole away to another part of the boat. After a short while he reached Wilmington, Dela ware, where he took a steamboat to Philadelphia, and the train from there to New York City. 28 ] UNSUNG HEROES The wonderful sights of this great city seemed to make him forget almost everything except the fact that he was now a fugitive slave. A few hours after reaching New York, to his surprise he met on the street a man whom he had known in Balti more. This man, also a fugitive, began at once to tell Frederick that there were men in New York City hired to betray fugitives and that he must therefore trust no man with his secret. This news so disturbed Frederick, that instead of seeking a home, he spent the night among bar rels on one of the New York wharves. Unable to remain longer without food or shelter, the next day he sought out on the streets a sailor who be friended him and then took him to the home of a Mr. Ruggles— an "undergroxmd railroad station" — where he was hidden for several days. During these days his sweetheart came on from Baltimore and they were married. On the day of their mar riage they set out for New Bedford, Massachu setts, where Frederick as a ship's calker might possibly find work. Their money gave out on the way but a "Friend", seeing the situation, paid their fares for the remainder of the journey. After reaching New Bedford, a room was soon secured in the home of a very good man who hked Frederick's face. They talked of manv things FREDERICK DOUGLASS [ 29 among which was the wisdom of Frederick's changing his name. The man said, "I have just been reading Scott's Lady of the Lake and I suggest that you take the name Douglass, for that grand man, Douglass of Scotland". "Douglass of Scotland? Who was he?" asked Frederick. The good man began by telling the story of the bravery in battle of Douglass of Scot land. Before he had finished his story, Frederick was eager to take the name of Douglass. He had now a fine-sounding name — Frederick Douglass — but he had neither money nor a job. He started out seeking work at his trade but was told again and again that the calkers there would not work with him. Finally, he was forced to take whatever his hands could find to do. He sawed wood; he shoveled coal. He dug cellars; he re moved rubbish from back yards. He loaded and unloaded ships and scrubbed their cabins until he secured steady work. While he was at his work one day a yoimg man brought him a newspaper edited by a man whose name was William Lloyd Garrison, of whom Douglass had never heard before. This paper, for which he immediately subscribed, was known as "The Liberator". He read every word in the issue which the agent gave him and waited impa- 30 ] UNSUNG HEROES tiently for the next one to come. When it came, there was in it an article about a grand convention to be held in Nantucket. Douglass read the article to the home people. He said that he needed a vacation, which might well be taken at the time of this convention. The following issue of the paper told still more of the plans for the convention. He concluded that he must attend it. He went to the convention without any thought of being known to any one or of taking any part whatever in the meetings. A prominent abohtion- ist, however, who had heard Frederick speak to his people in a little schoolhouse in New Bedford, sought him out and asked him to say a few words to the convention. When he rose to speak, he was trembling in every limb. He could hardly stand erect. It seemed to him that he could scarcely say two words without hesitating or stammering, but he went on. As he told of his experiences as a slave, the audience was exceedingly quiet. "When he had finished, the people broke into applause and ex citement. William Lloyd Garrison, now known as a leading abolitionist, was the next speaker. He spoke with feeling, taking Frederick Doug lass as his subject. The audience sat motionless and some people present even wept. FREDERICK DOUGLASS [ 31 At the close of the meeting, another abolitionist came to Douglass and urged him to become a traveling agent for the Massachusetts Anti- Sla very Society. For two reasons, he did not wish to take such a position. In the first place, having been out of slavery just three years, he was afraid he could not speak well enough to travel in that way; and, secondly, he feared that his former mas ter might hear of him and send for him. The abolitionist, however, unwilling to accept excuses, urged Douglass until finally he consented to travel for three months. Before many days had passed he was on the road as a lecturer against slavery. One morning he went to Grafton, Massachu setts, and tried to get a place to hold a meeting. But he could not get a hall or even a chm-ch. Nevertheless, he was so determined to speak to the people that he went to a hotel and borrowed a dinner bell. Soon he was seen running through the streets like a madman, ringing the bell and crying out, "Frederick Douglass, recently a slave, will speak on Grafton Commons at seven o'clock tonight". Many came out to hear what such a strange man could say and all left at the close of that open-air meeting apparently more thoughtful 32 ] UNSUNG HEROES than when they came. The next day ministers of the large churches in that town came to him and offered to open their doors for his meetings. For several years he did nothing but travel and hold meetings. He attended one hundred anti- slavery conventions and spoke at every one of them. During the first three or four months of his travel he told the story of his experiences as a slave. Then he became tired of repeating the same old story and began to show by the manner in which he expressed himself that he was thinking deeply about the whole question of slavery. "Let us have the facts. Be yourself and tell your story", said his hearers again and again, but Douglass said that he was tired of telling his per sonal story. He attempted to speak against the injustices heaped upon him and others, but his audiences murmured, saying, "He does not talk like a slave. He does not look or act Uke one ; and, besides he does not tell us where he came from or how he got away; and he is educated, too". Determined to remove doubt from their minds, Douglass wrote a narrative of his life as a slave and had it published. Now that the story of his life was pubUshed, friends Uke WendeU PhiUips, fearing he might be captiu-ed and taken back into slavery, advised that he go to Europe. He went FREDERICK DOUGLASS [ 33 and he spoke in all the large cities of England, Scotland and Ireland. In order that he might re turn home a free man, two women in England, "Friends" they were, started the plan of raising the money with which his freedom was purchased from his old master in Baltimore. On his return to America, he went to Rochester, New York, and for sixteen years edited there a paper caUed The North Star. So much money was needed for publishing this paper that he even mortgaged his home. For twenty-five years he lived in Rochester. During those years he wrote and lectured and conducted an "underground railroad station" in that city. Because of the disturbed conditions in his own country at this time, he went to Europe again but returned in six months on account of death in his family. Some of the disturbances which he left behind when he went away had subsided but others had risen. A President of the United States had to be elected. For a long time it seemed that no man was the choice of a majority of the people. FinaUy, Abraham Lincoln, who had once been a rail-splitter, was elected. Douglass worked hard to help elect Lincoln. He also took part in the terrible Civil War, which had come as a result of the country's disturbances. 34 ] UNSUNG HEROES As soon as the Governor of Massachusetts is sued the order for the many soldiers needed, Douglass enlisted his own sons, Charles and Lewis, from New York State, and took a leading part in raising the Fifty-fourth and Fifty-fifth Massachusetts Negro Regiments. The first of these soon won fame and a name throughout the country because of its brave attack on Fort Wag ner in the hour of trial. In that terrible battle at nightfaU, the Fifty-fourth was fearfuUy cut to pieces, losing nearly half of its officers, among whom was its beloved commander. Colonel Shaw. Douglass, with his son Charles as a recruiting ofiicer, worked steadily untU the emancipation of the slaves and the close of the war were brought about. He greatly rejoiced over the outcome of the war, yet a feeUng of sadness seemed to come over him. What was he to do? He felt that he had reached the end of the noblest and best part of his Ufe. He thought of settUng on a farm which he might buy with the few thousand doUars which he had saved from the sale of his book, caUed "My Bondage and Freedom", and from the pro ceeds of his lectures at home and abroad. The question, however, was soon decided for him. To his surprise, invitations began to pour in upon FREDERICK DOUGLASS [ 35 him from colleges, clubs and literary societies offering him one hundred and even two hundred dollars for a single lecture. One of the Uterary societies of Western Re serve CoUege invited him to address its members on one Commencement Day. He had never been inside of a schoolhouse for the purpose of study ing, therefore the thought of speaking before col lege professors and students gave him anxiety. He spent days in study for the occasion. Not be ing able to find in our libraries a certain book which he needed, he sent to England for it. Not long after his address on that Commencement Day, the thought came to Douglass that the Ne gro was stiU in need of the opportunity to vote, and thereby become a citizen. He talked about the question and finally set himself to the task of gaining this right for his people. His first marked step in the matter was to gain for himself and ten other men an interview with the President of the United States. The discus sion on that occasion brought the question prac tically before the whole American public. The next great step in gaining the ballot for the freed men was taken in Philadelphia in 1866, at a great convention called the "National Loyalists' Con- 36 j UNSUNG HEROES vention", which was attended by the ablest men from all sections of the country. Douglass's own city, Rochester, New York, elected him to represent her. WTiile he was marching in the long procession through the streets of Philadelphia, he saw standing on the corner of Ninth and Chestnut Streets, the daugh ter of Miss Lucretia Auld, under whose window he had sung as a hungry slave boy. He went to her and expressed his surprise and joy at seeing her. "But what brought you to PhUadelphia at this time?" Douglass asked. She replied, "I heard you were to be here and I came to see you walk in the procession". She followed the procession for several blocks and joined in the applause given Frederick Douglass as he passed. In that convention, resolutions were finaUy passed in favor of giving the freedmen the right to vote. Douglass was called forward to speak. The vote passed by that convention, it is said, had its influence in bringing about the passage of the Fifteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States. After the convention, Douglass went to Wash ington, D. C, as editor of a newspaper. It was FREDERICK DOUGLASS [ 37 not long before he became what is caUed Elector- at-Large for the State of New York. As such a representative, the Republican party of that state sent him to Washington to carry its sealed vote which went toward electing Grant as President. Douglass later received an invitation to speak at the monument of the unknown loyal dead, at Arlington, on Decoration Day. Five years later, when he spoke at the unveiling of the Lincoln Monument in Lincoln Park, Washington, D. C, the President of the United States and his Cabinet, judges of the Supreme Com-t, members of the Senate and the House of Representatives, and many thousands of other citizens were there to listen to him, to honor the memory of Lincoln and to show their apprecia tion of such a gift from the freedmen. Douglass was appointed United States Marshal of the District of Columbia. As Marshal he visited the criminal courts every day to see that the criminals received justice. There were also high social duties attached to this office. President Garfield later appointed him Recorder of Deeds of the District of Columbia, at which post he re mained for nearly five years. In this position, he was responsible for having recorded in the public records every transfer of property, every deed of 38 ] UNSUNG HEROES trust and every mortgage made in the capital of the nation. J In 1886, two years after he was Recorder of| Deeds, he and his wife — the second Mrs. Dougj lass — made a tour through England, Scotland and Ireland, where they met many great people besides the children of many of Douglass's old friends. His next and last appointment as a high public official was to the ofiice of Minister to Hayti. President Harrison appointed him to this office. The President of Hayti also appointed him to act as commissioner for that country at the Chicago World's Fair in 1893. Many boys and girls who have read his books admit that they have been inspired by the Ufe he lived in traveling from the log cabin on the East ern Shore of Maryland to the high and important offices which he held in Washington. The best one of these books is called "My Life and Times, by Frederick Douglass". After his death on February 20, 1895, at his home in Anacostia, Dis trict of Columbia, the citizens of Rochester, New York, erected a public monument to his memory. His epitaph has been written in his own words : "Do not judge me hy the heights to tohich I may have risen hut hy the depths from which I have come". PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR Chapter II PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR The Poet 1872-1906 AN elevator boy — Paul Laurence Dunbar — a i. black high-school graduate — stood for a few moments at the entrance to his elevator. He seemed to fix his eyes on every one entering the Callahan Building. The CaUahan Building was a large structure located in a busy section of Dayton, Ohio. Its quick elevator service in spite of its limited num ber of elevators was often a subject of comment. The grating of the elevator cables and the thud of the car as it stopped for passengers were con stant reminders of the rapid service. Up and down, up and down, went the elevator, and ring, ring, went the beUs from morning until night. As the elevator moved upward and downward with grating cables, Paul kept his ear turned as though he were Ustening to a song. Apparently unnoticed, day after day he ran his elevator, stopping repeatedly first at one floor and then another until one day a woman entered his car and spoke to him. It was one of his former high-school teachers. Afteir greeting 'him, she [41 ] 42 J UNSUNG HEROES eagerly told him that the Western Association of Writers would soon meet in Dayton. Before the short conversation was finished, she asked him to write a poem of welcome to that association and promised that she would arrange for him to re cite it. Paul's busy days seemed to come and go very rapidly. Yet when the Western Association of Writers met a few weeks later he had composed his poem of welcome for the occasion. The printed programs of the association did not contain his name. The first day of the meeting, however, after being excused from his elevator duties, clad as he was, he hurried to the hall in which the ses sions were to be held. His teacher stood in the doorway waiting for him. He entered silently and made his way to the rostrum and began reciting his poem of welcome. Men and women in the audi ence at first straightened up to look at this swarthy lad. Then, as if suddenly struck by something in the poem, many a one turned his ear and leaned forward to listen. When Paul had finished, the entire audience broke into applause. Some even rushed forward to shake his hand. At the close of the meeting some of the writers looked for the boy poet but he had hurried back to his elevator. Just at the moment when they PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR [ 43 were about to give up their search for him they ran across his former high-school teacher. She, with enthusiasm exceeding theirs, told of Dim- bar's graduating from high-school in 1891 with honors. She told of his composing the class-song which was sung at the commencement exercises. One of the writers interrupted to ask who the boy was and what he was doing. The teacher, speak ing hurriedly as though she had something else important to tell first, said that Dunbar was once editor of their high-school paper. She also told of his writing his first poem before he was seven years old. Then proceeding to answer the writer's questions she said that Dunbar's mother was a washerwoman and that he was the elevator boy at the CaUahan Building ; and looking each of these writers in the face, she added : "Dunbar always brings and carries the clothes for his mother". Three of the men, after inquiring where the Callahan Building was, started in search of it. They found it and soon entered the elevator. Among the first things they saw were a Century Magazine, a lexicon, a scratch tablet and a pencil lying on a stool. Dimbar was in the act of starting his car when one of the men said: "No! No! Do not go up for us! We came simply to see you 44 ] UNSUNG HEROES and to tell you how much we appreciated the poem you read this morning". Dunbar looked at them with great embarrass ment. As he began to thank them a ring of the elevator signal came from the top floor. With a modest bow and a request to be excused, he took hold of the power lever and up the elevator went and soon down it came again. In the midst of the conversation, constantly interrupted by passengers entering the elevator, one of the visitors asked, "What wages are you getting here?" "Four dollars a week. Sir", answered Dunbar. ""What are you doing with your money?" asked another. Dunbar, somewhat hesitatingly said, "WeU, I help my mother and then I am trying to buy a Uttle home for her, too". "How on earth — ?" Ring, ring, went beUs on different floors. Up went the elevator and then down it came. Hurrying to finish his sentence, the visitor con tinued, "How on earth did you start to buy a home on four dollars a week? AVhere is your father?" Dunbar, disturbed by so many questions and so many beUs, said hurriedly, "I bought the home through the Building and Loan Associa- PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR [ 45 tion. My father was a plasterer but he died when I was twelve years old". As another beU began to ring, the men said goodbye and went away talking about the boy and pledging each other to propose his name for membership in the Western Association of Writers. Dunbar seemed greatly encouraged by the Western Association members. He had also re ceived promises of help from others. One evening, after a hard day on the elevator, he hurried home, saying to his mother as he entered, "Ma, where are those papers I asked you to save for me some months ago?" "What, those botany sheets?" she replied. Dunbar failed to answer immediately. She con tinued, "They are in that box under the kitchen safe". The neighbors had begxm to ask Mrs. Dunbar why she was keeping all of those papers piled on the table for so long. Seeing that so many were noticing the unsightly stacks of papers, she had removed them one day from the crowded little room to the kitchen. With a lighted lamp in his hand, Dimbar went to the kitchen and pulled out the box. There lay his papers, some of which he had not seen for five or six years. He pulled a chair up to the box and began sorting them. "When he had finished and 46 ] UNSUNG HEROES given the box a shove which sent it back under the safe, he made known his readiness for his supper. The next morning as he was leaving for his work he said, "Goodbye, Ma, I'm going to see about pubUshing a book today". He walked rap idly to the Callahan Building and immediately took charge of his elevator. As soon as his lunch hour came he hurried to a publishing house and asked to see the manager. He was out to lunch but one of his assistants was caUed in. After look ing the manuscript through hastily he offered to publish it for one hundred and twenty-five doUars. Dunbar looked at him and shook his head. Un able to conceal his disappointment, he took up his manuscript, bade him good-day and started out. The business manager of the firm happened to come in at this moment and saw Dunbar starting out. He noticed the gloom and the disappoint ment written on the boy's face, called him over to his desk and asked what was the trouble. Dunbar at first, choking with something which seemed to cut off his words, simply handed him the manu script, repeating as best he could what the assist ant had said about pubUshing it for one hundred and twenty-five dollars. The business manager took the manuscript and read here and there a poem. He questioned the lad at length about his PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR [ 47 work and his home. Knowing something about Dunbar's high-school record, he said, "You go back to your work; the poems will be published". He went on with his work, scarcely waiting for the boy to thank him, Dunbar bowed, stepped away Ughtly and with a broad smile on his face hurried back to his elevator. The hours seemed to drag and yet he worked away until closing time came. On leaving his elevator he went by leaps and bounds until he reached his mother's door. With his key in hand, he unlocked it and rushed in ahnost breathless, saying, "Oh, Ma, they are going to print my book!" As he told the story about the business manager he laughed and cried. Mrs. Dunbar laughed and cried too until far into the night. As the days came and went, Mrs. Dunbar be gan to listen with unusual interest for the ringing of the door-bell. Finally, one morning as the snow f eU thick and fast, there was a knock at the door. Mrs. Dunbar grabbed up her apron, wiped the soapsuds from her hands and hurried to open it. There stood a delivery man with a large package. "For Mr, Paul Dunbar", said he, "By the way, who is this Dunbar? Is he a doctor, a lawyer, a preacher, or what?" Mrs. Dunbar responded, saying, ""Who? Paul? 48 ] UNSUNG HEROES Why, Paul is just an elevator boy and a — a poet". The man looked at her with squinting eyes, glanced about at the front of the poor Uttle cot tage, then bade her good-day and went his way. She made a small opening at one end of the package and peeped at the books. Before realiz ing what she was doing, she threw her arms around the package and knelt down with her head resting on it, offering a silent prayer, "When finaUy she returned to her washtub, she rubbed a garment a while, then wiped away the tears which were dropping into the soapsuds. The wash seemed to hold her unusuaUy long and yet, when she had finished it, the sun was stiU high in the heavens. She prepared her dinner, did her chores, then sat down to watch and wait, FinaUy there came a familiar step. She Ustened for a moment, then rose and opened the door whUe Dunbar was feel ing for his keys, "See the books, Paul!" she said, pointing to the package. They opened up the package and stood half bent over it while Paul was reading from the little book of poems which he had named "Oak and Ivy", They took it to the dinner table, looked at it, read more from it and rejoiced together. The next morning, as Dunbar went back to his PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR [ 49 elevator, he took along some copies of "Oak and Ivy", These he ventured to show to the passen gers who he thought might buy a copy. His supply was soon sold out. Greatly surprised at his first day's success, he took more copies the next day, and stiU more the following days for over a week. In less than two weeks' time, he walked into the office of the business manager of the publishing house, reached into his pocket and puUed out one hundred and twenty-five dollars. This he placed in the business manager's hands, adding his hearty, humble thanks. He told of his success in selling the books on the elevator and left the publishing-house to see a man who was offering him a minor position in the court-house. After serving notice on the employment manager of the Callahan Building and assisting him in securing another elevator boy, Dunbar left to take up his new duties. Within the next few days he smiled and re joiced as he read a review of his poems in a news paper called The Toledo Blade. A few days later he began to receive letters from people who had read this review. Still later, some of these people arranged for him to give readings of his poems. Among those who wrote him about the review was a Dayton woman who sent a copy of "Oak 50 ] UNSUNG HEROES and Ivy" to a Dr, Tobey of Toledo. Dr. Tobey read a few of the poems and laid the book aside. A few weeks later when he went to Dayton on some business, he discovered to his surprise that even the business men were talking about Dunbar and his poems. On his return home, he took up the book and sat down to read the poems again. He sat there reading and re-reading, occasionaUy stopping between poems as if he were thinking deeply. When he had finished the book he drew his check book from his pocket, made out a check to Dunbar and enclosed it in a letter asking for a number of copies of "Oak and Ivy", When Dunbar's letter in reply, expressing his deep appreciation for the check, was received, Dr, Tobey seemed to be deeply moved. He wrote Dunbar immediately inviting him to Toledo to give a reading of his poems. The young poet read the letter to his mother and soon began to prepare for the trip. Night after night, until time to go, he practiced reading some of his poems which had not been published. Even whUe the train sped along to Toledo, he sat saying over and over to himself the words of some of the poems. After the reading that night, Dr, Tobey and a Mr, Thatcher, who had also helped Dunbar, shook his hand warmly and asked about the new poems. PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR [51 Upon learning that the young poet had a second book ready they at once agreed to furnish the money to publish it. Consequently, a second book of poems called "Majors and Minors" was soon published. The day that Dr, Tobey received a copy of "Majors and Minors" he was called into a consul tation which kept him at a hotel that night. He and a friend sat up reading this little book of poems untU midnight. Just as they had finished and stepped up to the desk to get their keys, an other man walked up too. He was a great actor playing Monte Cristo at that time in Toledo. Dr, Tobey upon being introduced to him said, "I know you actor folks are always being bored by people wanting you to read and give opinions of poems, but I have something here that I wish you would read if you will". The actor took the crude little copy of "Majors and Minors" and turned its pages, Dr, Tobey asked him to read a poem entitled "When Sleep Comes Down to Soothe the Weary Eyes". He read it at first quietly as he leaned over the counter. Then he read it aloud. With great ex pression and gesture he read it a third time. He turned to another poem and read that; then to another and another until the clock struck one — 52 ] UNSUNG HEROES two — three. He took out his watch and looked at it. "Hello!" he said, "Three o'clock in the morn ing! Dr. Tobey, I thank you for giving me this opportunity. In my opinion no poet has written such verses since the days of Poe". Dunbar soon gave up his work and went to Toledo to sell his book. One night after a very discouraging day, he walked into Dr. Tobey's office to tell him his troubles. Dr. Tobey said, "Well, my boy, how goes the battle?" "Oh, doctor", said Dunbar, with tears stream ing down his cheeks, "I never can offer to seU another book to any man". "Paul," repUed Dr. Tobey, "why don't you make up a speech?" "Oh", answered Paul, "I have tried to do that but my tongue cleaves to the roof of my mouth and I cannot say a word". The doctor said sympathetically, "You're no good as a book-agent. "While I was down town this morning I sold thi-ee of yom- books to three of the most prominent men in Toledo", Dr, Tobey then advised him to send a copy of "Majors and Minors" to the actor and author of another play which was then being presented in Toledo. Dunbar made several attempts to pre- PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR [ 53 sent the book in person but failed in each attempt. Nevertheless, before leaving Toledo, he saw to it that the book reached the actor. After reading it, the actor wrote Dunbar a most encouraging letter. He also sent a copy of the poems to the novelist, WilUam Dean HoweUs. This weU-known writer in turn sent a full-page review of the poems to Harper's Monthly. He described the little book as a countrified little volume in appearance which inwardly was full of a new world. Singular it was that the article appeared in Harper's Monthly on the 27th of June, 1896, which was Dunbar's twenty-fourth birthday. After being told of the article by a friend, Dunbar went to a newsstand and purchased a copy of Harper's Monthly. As he read the article, he said he knew not whether to laugh or cry, but no doubt he did a little of each. Hundreds of letters from all parts of the world, even from Athens, Greece, began to pour into the office of the publishers. Some were ordering Dun bar's poems, others were asking for his photo graph and stUl others were asking for information about him, ¦ On the Fourth of July, Dunbar and his mother went, at Dr, Tobey's invitation, to Toledo. "When they arrived at the meeting place about sixty prominent persons from Toledo and elsewhere 54 j UNSUNG HEROES sat waiting to greet them, Dr, Tobey, with his arm about Dunbar's shoulder as they walked to wards a little ante-room said, "It has aU come at once, Paul. Mr. HoweUs has made you famous. They all want to meet you now. Those who made fun of you because of your color and your poverty are now eager to clasp your hand. This is going to be the testing day of your life, I hope you wiU bear good fortune and popularity as weU and as bravely as you have met your disappointments and your humiUations. If so, that wiU indeed be a proof of your greatness". Among the poems which Dunbar recited that day was "Ships that Pass in the Night". The audience seemed especially moved by this poem. The most prominent man in that select group said, "Of all things I ever heard, I never Ustened to anything so impressive". That night, after such a triumphant day, Dun bar, sitting alone, wrote these Unes: Mere human strength may stand ill fortune's frown ; So I prevailed, for human strength was mine ; But from the killing strength of great renown Naught may protect me save a strength Divine. Help me, O Lord, in this my trembling cause. I scorn men's curses, but I dread applause. During these days of public attention, the poet visited some of the eastern cities, giving readings PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR [ 55 of his works to audiences composed of people from all sections. On almost every occasion, the audience responded with loud applause and often with bursts of laughter. The following year, when the opportunity to go to England as a reader of his poems presented it self, he took advantage of it. While he was in London, the American Ambassador arranged an entertainment for him at which he read before many of the foremost men and women of Lon don. He was further entertained by prominent clubs and prominent people. Although he was being royally treated, he often ran away from the public gatherings in London to his lodging place to work on his first novel, "The Uncalled". One day just as he was nearing the end of this novel, he received a letter from a friend in Amer ica asking if he would accept a place in the Library of Congress at Washington, D. C. He vtrote the friend immediately thanking him for his interest and assuring him that he would be glad to accept the position if offered. On his return to America a little later, he went at once to Washington, D. C, where he began his work in the Library of Congress. Among the first things he did was to look up a home for his mother. As soon as they were settled in their 56 ] UNSUNG HEROES home, he began to use his evenings and aU of his spare time in writing. For about fifteen months, he sat at his desk nearly every evening until far into the night. One night he wrote a friend, saying, "I am working very hard these days, so if it is only for the idle that the devil runs his employment bureau, I have no need of his services". By such diligence, he soon had published a third book of poems which he called "Lyrics of Lowly Life". Apparently great joy and a cessation of undue toil took the place of his very busy days for a while. About this time, he married a young woman who also had written some verses. Both she and he appeared to be very happy untU he began to be annoyed by a stubborn, hacking cough. The dust from the library books seemed to aggravate it so that he soon resigned his posi tion. Thinking that a change of climate would do him good, he made a tour of the South, giving readings of his poems as he went. The cough continued to trouble him. Taking the advice of a physician, he began to prepare to go to the CatskUl Mountains. However, before he left, another volume of poems appeared which he had named "Lyrics of the Hearthside". The new volume of poems seemed to give him PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR [ 57 strength. He completed his preparations and set out for the mountains. While there he worked steadily writing poems and stories. Just as stead ily did his cough seem to grow worse. After a while, he began to feel that Denver, Colorado, was the place for him. He consulted a physician and was not long in starting out for Denver, ac companied by Mrs. Dunbar and his mother. The long trip seemed to tire him greatly and yet he reached Denver in safety. After a few days' rest, he did his best at strolling around looking at the mountainous country. One day, as he sat writing a friend, he said, "Well, it is something to sit down under the shadow of the Rocky Mountains even if one only goes there to die". After securing a little house in a town near Denver, he bought an old mare, which he hitched every morning to his buggy and drove for miles. One day after a long, long ride over the beautiful hUls he sat down and wrote a poem about "That or Mare of Mine". Although he could not walk much, he worked for hours each day until he had finished a novel which he called "The Love of Landry". After spending some months in Denver, he and Mrs, Dunbar returned to Washington, D, C, 58 ] UNSUNG HEROES where they bought a home and apparently settled down. The home, however, was soon closed. He went first to Chicago and then to Dayton, where his mother had returned. Although his cough was about as bad as it could be, he was working on another volume of poems which came out during the early winter months of 1903 under the title of "Lyrics of Love and Laughter". During the seven years of his illness, he often received his friends. Sometimes he even served tea for them. Once a friend who had business in Dayton called him by telephone saying that she was coming out to see him. When she reached his home, there he was curled up on a couch for all the world like a small boy. He was writing a poem just to please her. Said he on her arrival, "Just wait a moment, I'm hunting for a rhyme". And sure enough, in just a few moments he handed her a scrap of paper on which was written : TO A POET AND A LADY You sing, and the gift of State's applause Is yours for the rune that is ringing. But tell me truly, is that the cause ? Don't you sing for the love of singing? You think you are working for wealth and for fame. But ah, you are not, and you know it ; For wife is the sweetest and loveliest name. And every good wife is a poet ! PAUL LAURENCE DUNBAR [ 59 Dunbar continued to write stories and poems almost to the day of his death, which came on the 9th day of February, 1906. His last poem he never wrote down, but simply dictated to his stenographer. BOOKER TALIAFERRO WASHINGTON Booker T. Washington Chapter III BOOKER TALIAFERRO WASHINGTON Educator, Orator, Author, Statesman 1859-1915 I Boyhood and Youth EARLY one winter morning, about sixty years ago, a big rooster began flapping his wings and crowing — flap, flap, flap — cock-a- doodle-doo, cock-a-doodle-doo. Then a little rooster began cock-a-doodle-doo, cock-a-doodle- doo. Then here, there and everywhere was the soimd — ^flap, flap, cock-a-doodle-doo — until all Franldin County, Virginia, seemed to have wings and crowing apparatus. In the midst of this flapping and crowing, young Booker awoke, rubbed his eyes and yawned. Then he jumped out of bed, his feet striking the earthen floor and his teeth chattering in spite of the blazing fire before him. The wind, whistling through the cracks in the sides and the roof of the cabin, evidently made the dirt floor very cold to his feet. He dressed quickly, having only three pieces [63] 64 ] UNSUNG HEROES to put on — a flax shirt and two wooden shoes. As the coarse shirt began to slip down over his back, it felt so much like pin points or chestnut burrs against his flesh, that he cried "Ouch, Ouch !" as he straightened out the folds of his shirt. Then he sat on the side of the bed to put on his wooden shoes. He pulled at the pieces of rough leather on the tops of them. He twisted and turned his feet until they adjusted themselves as best they could to the shape of the wooden shoes. As he started toward the fire, the sound of his shoes — blump, blump, blump — caused his mother to look around. She, being the plantation cook, had been so busy getting breakfast for fifty or more planta tion hands that she had scarcely noticed Booker until now. "Good morning, son", she said, "run out to the pan and wash your face. Ma wishes you to get out some sweet potatoes." Booker could not run very fast in his stiff shoes but he went out as quickly as he could, carrying a gourd of water in his hand. He washed his face and soon returned with a field hoe on his shoulder. After removing several boards from the top of the potato hole in the middle of the dirt floor, he began to dig into it with his hoe. First he dug out some of the loose earth and then some of the BOOKER TALIAFERRO WASHINGTON [ 65 straw. He dropped down on his knees and pulled out many potatoes with his hands. After clearing a place for them on the hearth, his mother covered them over with hot ashes. With a long, flat iron she turned the burning coals from the big skillet lids. The smell of the corn-pone and of the roasting potatoes so tanta- Uzed the cat that she slid in through the cat hole in the lower right-hand corner of the cabin wall. Men, women and children hurried from all parts of the plantation to snatch a bite to eat at this Uttle cabin. Many mouths were busy eating corn-bread and molasses. Here and there a crust of bread was used as a knife and fork but many just plunged their fingers into the molasses and bread. Booker stood like the other children with his tin pan while molasses was being poured into it. He tipped the edges of the pan first this way and then that way so that the molasses might run all over the bottom of it. Several months later things were all changed. There was no need of a plantation cook, and so Booker's mother was getting ready to go away. One morning as some of those same roosters flapped their wings and crowed for day, a rough little cart rolled up to her cabin door. Booker, 66 ] UNSUNG HEROES his brother John, and his mother hurried around, grabbed up their few bed clothes, stools and skU- lets and threw them into the cart. "Goodbye, goodbye", they said to their friends. And off they started to join Booker's stepfather in Maiden, West Virginia. For two weeks they traveled, sleeping in the open air and cooking their food out-of-doors over a log fire. One night they started to camp in an old empty log cabin. Just as the fire had gotten well started and their paUet on the floor was made, a large black snake f uUy a yard and a half long dropped down the chimney and gUded across the floor. They ran out of the cabin and later re moved their things from it. The next day they continued their journey. Early one evening, as they began to drive more slowly in search of a good place to stop for the night, a rider came by with his horse in a gaUop and bowed to them. Booker caUed out, "Mister, how far is it to Maiden?" The man did not stop but answered, saying, "About two miles over the hiU". The little cart rolled on untU it seemed that they had gone ten miles over the hUl instead of two. Finally they heard men swearing and quar reling. They saw men fighting and drinking and BOOKER TALIAFERRO WASHINGTON [ 67 gambling. Suddenly a man stepped up and greeted them, "HeUo, hello, howdy, howdy". It was Booker's stepfather who had come to Maiden several years before. "Oh, what is that. Pa?" Booker exclaimed, "over there where the light is?" "That is only a salt furnace", he answered. "There are plenty of them here. I have a job waiting for you in one of them". In a few days, just as he had been told, Booker was at his new job in a salt furnace. In this part of the tovm, in that part and all about, people were asking each other, "Have you heard of the school that is to open in Maiden? They teU me that the teacher is already here and that old folks as well as children can go to it". This question was asked young Booker. His eyes sparkled and his face lighted up on hearing such good news. Then he said in an undertone, "Oh, weU, I can't go to school anyway for I have to work aU day". When the school began there were many happy faces, old and young. Every night Booker in quired about the school and tried to show his mother and stepfather how he could work and go to school too. After a great deal of talking about it, they arranged one night for Booker to go to 68 ] UNSUNG HEROES work at four o'clock in the morning, work untU nine o'clock, then go to school and return to his work after school. The next morning, at nine o'clock, Booker started off to school on a trot. "^Vhen he reached the school-room door, panting for breath, aU eyes were turned upon him, especiaUy because he did not have on a hat. He hesitated a moment but went in just the same and took a seat. The teacher was calling the roll. "John Jones", he called. "Present", said John Jones. "Mary Ann Roberts", he added. "Present", said Mary Ann Roberts. And on he went until he came to the end of the roll. Then he turned to Booker and asked his name. Booker twisted and turned for a few mo ments and said nothing, because he knew he had no name except Booker. Suddenly he remem bered hearing about a great man whose name was Washington. "When the teacher asked his name again, he jumped up from his seat, and with one hand raised, said, "My name is Booker Wash ington". He had found a name for himself that day. That night his mother sewed two pieces of cloth together and made him a hat. He seemed very happy at school. One after noon he and his classmates — about fifteen of them BOOKER TALIAFERRO WASHINGTON [ 69 — were sitting on a long pine-log bench, rocking to and fro and singing out their spelling lesson — "b-a, k-e-r, baker; m-a, k-e-r, maker; s-h-a, k-e-r, shaker". There was a knock at the door. Every body was silent. The door opened and in walked Booker's stepfather. He quietly explained to the teacher that he had gotten Booker a good job in the coal mines and Booker would have to stop school. The next morning Booker entered a coal mine. He hesitated a little at first about working there because of the darkness. In this mine one day, he overheard two men talking of Hampton Institute, He crept along in the darkness of the mine, close enough to hear what they were saying. One of the men said, "Yes, they teU me that Negro boys and girls can work their way through that school". The con versation continued, Booker Washington eagerly grasped every word; and he made up his mind on the spot to go to Hampton Institute that fall. That faU, in 1872, with a cheap little satchel of clothes across his shoulder, he started out for Hampton Institute. The journey was long and there were no through trains, therefore stage coaches were used much of the way. Booker sat back in the stage-coach as the horses trotted along, counting his little money and wondering what he 70 ] UNSUNG HEROES would do when it was aU spent. Most of his earn ings had been used by his stepfather. "When there was nothing left in his pockets, he walked some and begged rides on wagons untU he reached Richmond, Virginia. It was late in the night and he did not have a penny left. He walked and begged for a place to sleep un til he was tired out. Soon he spied a high, board sidewalk. After looking around and assuring himself that no one saw him, he crept under it and slept for the rest of the night. For some days he worked in Richmond and slept under the board sidewalk at night. When he had earned enough to pay his raUroad fare on to Hampton Institute, he started out again and reached there with just fifty cents in his pocket. He was tired; he was hungry; he was dirty; he was everything but discouraged. One of the northern teachers looked him over and was not sure apparently that he had come to the right place. "While he stood anxiously waiting, he saw others freely admitted to the school. The teacher finally turned to him, saying, "WeU, come with me". He foUowed her to a reci tation room. She said, pointing to the room, "You may sweep that room". He swept the room three times. He moved every piece of furniture and BOOKER TALIAFERRO WASHINGTON [ 71 swept. He swept every closet and corner. He dusted everything four times. He dusted the wood-work around the waUs. He dusted every table and table leg. He dusted every bench. Then he returned to the teacher and said, "WeU, I am through with that job". She went to the door of the room, walked in and looked into every corner and closet. She took out her handkerchief and rubbed it over benches and wood-work. Unable to find one bit of dirt any where, she said, "I guess you wfll do to enter this school". His first two nights at Hampton Institute were somewhat trying ones. Although he was thirteen years old, he had never used a sheet on his bed; and now there were two sheets on his bed. The first night he slept under both of them and the second night he slept on top of both of them. However, with the help of older boys he learned the right way. He paid his expenses that year by working as a janitor. He brought in coal. He made fires. He removed ashes. He swept and dusted class-rooms. Summer time came and Booker Washington had nothing to do. He scratched his head as he thought of seUing his coat or of trying several other plans, none of which, he feared, would work. 72 J UNSUNG HEROES A hotel job opened up to him. He took it and by working hard that summer and washing his own clothes, he saved all the money which he earned. Several more summers and winters of hard work came and went. Finally one June morning in 1875, the Hampton teachers were busy deco rating the little chapel for the commencement exercises. People began to gather. The students took their places. The choir began to sing. The graduating class marched in and at the head of the line marched a young man who was caUing himself now Booker TaUaferro Washington. He had learned that his mother had named him Booker Taliaferro when he was born. II Educator: Tuskegee Institute One evening just six years after Booker Wash ington's graduation from Hampton Institute, he and General Samuel Chapman Armstrong, the founder and principal of Hampton Institute, were walking to the railroad station. General Armstrong was talking earnestly, shaking his head and making gestures now and then. He was teUing Booker Washington why he had asked him instead of any other boy to go to Tuskegee, Ala- BOOKER TALIAFERRO WASHINGTON [ 73 bama. Washington was listening without saying a word. Just as they reached the station, the sound, t-o-o-t, t-o-o-t, rang out up the road. Then, clang, cling, cling, chuff, che-e-e was heard. The train stopped with a sudden jolt. Booker Washington grasped General Armstrong's hand. They shook like warm friends and bade each other goodbye. The former, with his bag in his hand, stepped upon the platform just as the bell rang and the train began to move. He glanced out of the window at the General, waved his hand and sat down. Apparently he tried to look out of the window and forget everything but he kept thinking of what General Armstrong had said about his work — of his two years of teaching at Maiden, his night school, his debating club with one of his big, brawny boy debaters waving his hand and saying, "Most honorable judges, I have proven to you that the pen is mightier than the sword". He reached into his bag and took out a picture of the little library which he had started for the school. He looked at it a long time, then he brought forth a letter which a friend had written him the year he was studying at Wayland Seminary, Washing ton, D. C;, and read that. He placed his things back into his bag, stretched 74 ] UNSUNG HEROES himself a little, yawned and feU asleep. Before the break of day he awoke and read several other letters telling of some of his experiences at Hampton Institute: for instance, his teaching the new Indian boys how to brush their teeth, how to comb and brush their hair, how to wash their hands and faces. One of the letters described Booker Washington's work in organizing the Hampton Institute night-school and teaching in it. Just at that moment, the train gave a sudden jolt which seemed to shake him out of his deep reverie. He straightened up and began to plan what he would do when he reached Tuskegee. He traveled on for nearly two days Ustening to the porter caU out the names of the many towns and cities as the train reached them. At last he heard the call, "Tuskegee, all out for Tuskegee!" He caught up his bag and hustled out. He looked aU around; but seeing no one looking for him he went ahead making inquiries about the building in which he was to open his school. He looked here and there for several days but the only buildings he could find for his use were an old, dilapidated church and an old shanty with an old chicken-house nearby. After making arrangements for the use of these BOOKER TALIAFERRO WASHINGTON [ 75 old buildings and hiring an old mule and a little wagon to take him over the country, he set out and visited the country people for miles around. He ate with them in their little log cabins. He often used the one and only fork on the table and passed it on to somebody else. That person used it and passed it on to the next person. Around that fork went until everybody at the table had had a chance to use it. He often slept with a family in its one-room cabin when there were so many in that family that he had to go out of doors to undress and dress. Still he kept on visiting for several months until he had seen what the people needed, and had advertised his school. On the morning of July 4, 1881, the doors of the old dUapidated church in Tuskegee were pulled as wide open as the sagging walls would permit. An old cracked bell was rung, and in walked thirty pupUs, some of whom were forty years old. Not one was less than fifteen years old. Every one worked hard and things went well until one day a hard rain came. Water streamed in upon Mr. Washington so that a pupil had to hold an umbrella over him while he heard the recitations. Six weeks of such teaching passed and then another teacher. Miss Olivia Davidson of Ohio, came to assist Mr, Washington. She taught 76 ] UNSUNG HEROES school and gave festivals and suppers in order to raise five hundred dollars to pay for a school farm. All of the people for miles around wanted to help the school. Some brought five cents ; some brought stalks of sugar cane. Others brought quilts. One old lady about seventy years old, clad in just clean rags, hobbled in one morning on a cane. She said, "Mr. Washington, God knows I spent the best days of my life in slavery. God knows I am ignorant and poor; but I know what you and Miss Davidson are trying to do. I know you are trying to make better men and better women of my race. I haven't any money, but I want you to take these six eggs which I've been saving up, and I want you to put these six eggs into the edu cation of these boys and girls". Mr. Washington and his assistant worked very hard to raise the five hundred dollars and to get the school started* well. He knew how much the farm would mean to the school. He knew also that the students did not Uke clearing the land and working the field, and so one day he planned what he called a "chopping bee". With his ax swung across his shoulder he led the students out to the farm and made a challenge to outchop any of them. The old ones chopped and the young ones BOOKER TALIAFERRO WASHINGTON [ 77 chopped. The boys chopped and the girls chopped. AU of them chopped but none out- chopped their teacher, Booker Washington. Boys and girls who look at the picture of Tus kegee Institute as it is today will probably say: "My! Can this be the school for which the old lady brought the six eggs? Can this be the school for which the 'chopping bee' was held?" It is really that same school. Booker Wash ington and his assistants worked so faithfully and weU that Tuskegee Institute has received not only the six eggs but hundreds of thousands of dollars. The gifts had increased so that when Tuskegee Institute was thirty-four years old it owned two thousand four hundred acres of land, with one hundred and eleven buildings on the grounds. In addition to this, Tuskegee Institute had about twenty thousand acres of land given it by the United States Government as an endowment. The number of students in thirty-four years had increased from thirty to about two thousand and the number of teachers had increased from one to two hundred. In the early days the school had a dark base ment dining-room but now there is a large dining-hall on the campus. In the early days the few knives and forks had to be passed around 78 ] UNSUNG HEROES among the students almost continuously during a meal ; but now there are sufficient knives and forks for all. Once upon a time the students used rough boxes and stools for dining-room seats but now there are dining-room chairs for aU. In the early days Tuskegee Institute had no kitchen. Blazing fires were made out of doors upon which pots and skillets were set for cooking. Many a time a girl would step on a live coal, throw down the skiUet Ud and hop away to nurse her burn for a moment; now there are modern kitchens at Tuskegee In stitute, Perhaps you have already begun to think that Tuskegee Institute with about one hundred large brick buildings must look like a Uttle city. It really does. All the buildings and the grounds are lighted by the school's own electric plant. Many industries such as domestic science, carpen try and blacksmithing are taught. The brick-making industry at Tuskegee Insti tute is an evidence of the fact that Booker Wash ington beUeved in the saying, "If at first you don't succeed, try, try again". He and his students of the early days made their first brick kiln for burning bricks, but the kiln would not work. They made a second kiln and that was a failure ; a third brick kiln with about 25,000 bricks in it feU in BOOKER TALIAFERRO WASHINGTON [ 79 the middle of the night just when the bricks were nearly ready to be taken out. This seemed Uke hard luck, but it appears that Booker Washington was never in all his life wholly discouraged at anything. He started a fourth brick kiln with the $15 which he secured by pawning his watch. To day 1,200,000 first-class bricks are manufactured in one season by the students of Tuskegee In stitute. Every day in the year visitors go to Tuskegee Institute from all parts of the world. They go to the shops where the boys are busy making wagons, buggies, cabinets and all sorts of things. They go to the trades building where the girls are cooking, sewing, making hats and doing laun dry work. They go to the hospital, to the library, to the classrooms, to the dining-hall and other buildings. They go to the farm, to the piggery, to the dairy farm. They go to the chapel. They hear the students sing and see them march out. Now and then at chapel exercises they see a girl or a boy called out of a long line because a button is off, or shoes are not polished, or clothing is not neat and tidy. These visitors go away saying to their friends that Booker Washington was certainly a great man. Some go to their homes far away and start 80 ] UNSUNG HEROES schools like Tuskegee Institute. Other visitors have been there, studied the school and gone away to do honor to Booker Washington. Ill Orator, Author, Statesman In 1896 Harvard University, one of the great est colleges in the country, honored Booker Wash ington. He spoke at the University and was later given the degree of Master of Arts. Five years later, another great institution, Dartmouth Col lege, invited him there and gave him the degree of Doctor of Laws. Wherever he spoke, people came from far and near to hear him. He spoke once in Essex HaU in London, England, and once at Bristol, Eng land. Just after the Spanish- American War, he was the peace-celebration speaker at the Chicago Auditorium. In the auditorium that day there were thousands of people, among whom was the President of the United States. And many thou sands were on the outside trying to hear Booker Washington speak. In the middle of his speech he said as he walked across the platform, "Nobody should help a lazy, BOOKER TALIAFERRO WASHINGTON [81 shiftless person". Then he smiled, opened his eyes wide and said, "Let me tell you this story: Once there were two men seeking to cross a river by means of a ferry boat. The fare across was three cents. One of the men, who seemed to be shiftless and lazy, said to the other, 'Please let me have three cents to cross the ferry; I haven't a penny'. The other man said to him, 'I am sorry not to accommodate you, boss, but the fact is that a man who hasn't three cents is just as bad off on one side of the river as he is on the other' ". The audi ence laughed and applauded. He said further: "But let me tell you, my friends, everybody is not like the man who did not have three cents. Early one morning not long ago, I was out watching my chickens and pigs. A pig I think is one of the grandest of animals. Old Aunt Caroline came striding by with a bas ket on her head. I said to her, '"Where are you going. Aunt Caroline?' She replied, 'Lord bless you, Mr. Washington, I've already been where I was going' ". The audience laughed again. The singing that day lifted one up and made one feel like marching and humming. Some of the poor people present wept for joy, and at the close of the meeting Booker Washington shook hands with many of them. He seemed to 82 ] UNSUNG HEROES understand them and to know their needs. When he wrote his book, "Up from Slavery", much of which was written on the train, he told how poor he himself was once. Dr. Washington traveled all over the North, East, West and South. He traveled in a special car through Arkansas, Oklahoma, Mississippi, Tennessee, South Carolina, North Carolina, Del aware, Texas, Florida, Louisiana, parts of Ala bama, Georgia, Virginia and West Virginia. His friends began to say, "Dr. Washington looks tired. Let us send him and his wife to Europe on a vacation". They gave his school a large sum of money. Then they talked vtith his wife, Mrs. Margaret Murray Washington, who was a graduate of a great coUege called Fisk Uni versity. She had helped Dr. Washington for some years in his work and knew how tired he must be. These friends talked and urged until she agreed to go too. All arrangements for the trip were completed. Dr. and Mrs. Washington bade goodbye to their friends, sailed across the ocean, and for three months went here and there through Holland, Belgium, France and England. He crossed the ocean a second time and then a third time. On these trips kings and queens entertained him and BOOKER TALIAFERRO WASHINGTON [ 83 honored him. In his own country, presidents of the United States caUed him in to talk over im portant matters. FoUowing one of his trips abroad, he wrote a book caUed "The Man Farthest Down", in which he told many sad stories about the poor and igno rant of Europe. He wrote about the women whom he saw in Europe hitched with oxen ploughing the fields. Among his other books are: "The Future of the American Negro", "A History of the Negro" and "Working with the Hands", He worked hard and seemed to hammer out success in everything. No one called him con ceited and yet he had great confidence in himself even to the last, "When the doctors in New York told him that he had but a few hours to live, he said, "Then I must start now for Tuskegee". He was a very sick man and could hardly walk when he reached the station but he refused to be carried to the train in an invalid's chair. For many hours the train sped southward before it reached Cheehaw, the junction station for Tus kegee. A smile came over his face as he drew near the school. However, he did not live many hours after reaching home. It had been his custom to rise early every morning, and so early in the morning 84 ] UNSUNG HEROES on the 14th of November, 1915, Booker T. Wash ington, the chieftain and the servant of all peo ples, rose and departed to the land of the blessed. For the next few days, the Tuskegee Institute grounds, even as large as they are, were almost packed with people from near and far. The poor, uneducated people, black and white, from the cotton fields of Alabama were there. Statesmen, scholars, editors, professional men, business men and just men were there. His wife, his two sons and his daughter were there. Many of those who were present said that the mind of the thinking world was there, for Booker Washington was re garded as one of the greatest men that ever lived. HARRIET TUBMAN msmu SHE TOLD HER HEARERS THRILLING STORIES. Chapter IV HARRIET TUBMAN The Moses of Her People 1820-1913 ABOUT one hundred years ago, people in . every civilized country were talking about the "underground raUroad" in the United States, The "underground railroad" was not really a railroad under the ground, but a secret way by means of which slaves escaped from their masters in the South and reached free territory. Reaching free territory sometimes meant escape from this country into Canada, Passengers, those seek ing to escape to free territory, on the "under ground railroad" were led by very brave and dar ing conductors. Among these conductors there was a woman whose name was Harriet Tubman, When Harriet was born in Dorchester County, Maryland, in 1820, she was named Araminta Ross, After she grew up, she caUed herself Har riet, When she became a woman she was married to John Tubman and was called Harriet Tubman, Harriet almost died with the measles when she was six years old. Soon after she recovered from this, her master threw a heavy weight at her and [87J 88 J UNSUNG HEROES injured her skull. For years she suffered from pressure on her brain which caused her to faU asleep at any time, wherever she was, whether she was seated on a rail fence or in a chair. It also caused her to stagger sometimes as she walked. No one except her African mother seemed to care for her or to pay any attention to her. Early one morning a lady came driving up to the home of Harriet's master, who met her at the gate and inquired what he could do for her. She asked for a slave-girl to care for her baby, but offered very low wages. The master shook his head, saying, "I can not furnish you a girl for that". As the lady pleaded with him, he stood looking on the ground and knitting his brow. Suddenly he lifted his head and said, "Yes, I have just one girl whom you may take; keep your eye on her because she may not have all that is coming to her". Harriet was called, placed in a wagon and driven away to the lady's home. The first thing the lady gave her to do was to sweep and dust the parlor. Harriet cautiously tiptoed into this wonderfully fine room, amazed at everything she saw. She finally began to sweep in much the same way as she had swept her mother's cabin. As soon as she had finished sweep ing, she took the dusting cloth and wiped o"ff the HARRIET TUBMAN [ 89 chairs, the table and the mantel-piece. The parti cles of dust, stiU fljring here and there over the room, soon settled on the furniture again. About this time, Harriet's new mistress stepped in and began to look around. The dust lay on the table, the chairs and the mantel in such a thick coating that ehe spoke very harshly to Harriet and ordered her to do the work all over. Har riet swept and dusted just as she had done before. The dust, having no other place to go, settled again on the furniture. The mistress en tered the parlor again, bringing with her this time a whip. With this she lashed Harriet with a heavy hand. Five times before breakfast that morning Harriet swept and dusted the parlor. Just as she had gotten her third whipping, her mistress's sister, who had been awakened from her morning slumber, opened the parlor door. "Why do you whip the child, sister, for not doing what she has never been taught to do?" she asked. "Leave Harriet to me for a few minutes and you wUl see that she wiU soon learn how to sweep and dust a room." The sister ordered Harriet to open the win dows first, to sweep the room and leave it a whUe until the dust settled, and to return then and wipe the dust from the furniture. 90 ] UNSUNG HEROES Harriet looked strangely at the big window, went to it and raised it inch by inch until it was high enough to fasten by a latch. She set in again and swept, and while the dust was settling, she went out and set the table for breakfast. Then she returned and dusted the parlor. That night she was ordered to sit up and rock the baby. The baby's cradle and Harriet's chair were placed near her mistress's bed. Occasionally Harriet's eyelids dropped and her head bobbed this way and that way. The cradle kept on rock ing because her foot was on the rockers. Once in a great while, the cradle would stop and the baby would begin to cry. The mistress would pick up her whip and give Harriet a cut across the head and shoulders which would make her jump and ahnost knock the cradle over. Under such treatment, Harriet became so worn and thin that the lady sent her back to her master saying that she wasn't worth a six-pence. Har riet was turned over to her mother, who nursed her until she was again strong enough to work. She was then hired out to a man who made her plow, drive oxen, lift a barrel of flour, and some times cut a half cord of wood a day. Soon she became iU again. She lay on her sick-bed from Christmas until March. Day after day she prayed. HARRIET TUBMAN [91 saying, "Oh, Lord, convert old Master; change that man's heart and make him a Cliristian". When some one told her that as soon as she was able to work, she would be sent away, she changed her prayer, saying: "Lord, if you are never going to change that man's heart, kill him. Lord, and take him out of the way, so he will do no more mischief". Harriet's master finally died but she continued UI for a long time. Even after she became stronger she still prayed at every turn. When she went to the horse-trough to wash her face and hands, she said, "Lord, wash me and make me clean". AVhen she took the towel to wipe them, she cried, "O Lord, for Jesus' sake, wipe away all my sins". When she took up the broom to sweep, she groaned, "O Lord, whatever sin there is in my heart, sweep it out. Lord, clear and clean". Early one morning many of the slaves in the "quarters" hurried about with a scared look on their faces, whispering something to each other as they passed. The news had leaked out that Harriet and two of her brothers were to be sold and sent the next day to the far South, As soon as the news reached Harriet, she held a hurried consultation with her brothers, telling them of the terrible things that would befall them if they 92 ] UNSUNG HEROES did not run away to the North, As they stood for a while looking about anxiously and ready to move on, they agreed to start for the North that night, Harriet began to scratch her head and wonder how she might tell her friends that she was going away. She thought and thought, and finaUy hit upon the plan of telling them in an old familiar song. As she was passing the next cabin door she sang out : When that old chariot comes, I'm going to leave you; I'm bound for the promised land. Friends, I'm going to leave you. I'm sorry, friends, to leave you, Farewell ! Oh, farewell ! But I'll meet you in the morning ! Farewell ! Oh, farewell ! She looked forward and backward and aU around several times. No overseer was in sight. She continued to sing, casting a meaning glance at first one and then another as she passed along: I'll meet you in the morning, When you reach the promised land. On the other side of Jordan, For I'm bound for the promised land. That night Harriet and her brothers spoke for a while in a whisper to their father and kissed him HARRIET TUBMAN [ 93 good-bye. Without disturbing their dear old mother, each started out quietly in slightly dif ferent directions, but all towards the same place. Soon the thi-ee came together. The brothers be gan to say to Harriet in very low tones that they were afraid that old master would send men out for them and capture them. They stood trem- bUng with excitement. AU at once, one of them and then the other broke aAvay and ran towards home as fast as they could, falling now and then over a log or a stump. Harriet stood watching them as long as she could see their shadows in the starUght, Fixing her eye on the North Star, she turned her face in that direction and went forward. All night long she walked untU the peep of day, then she lay down in the tall grass in a swamp. She lay there all day. The next night she started out again. Night after night she traveled, occasion aUy stopping to beg bread. She crouched behind trees or lay concealed in a swamp during the day until she reached Philadelphia. On her arrival in Philadelphia she stared at the people as they passed. She stood gazing at the fine houses and the streets. She looked at her hands, beUeving that they, too, looked new. After finding a place to stay, she walked out among the 94 ] UNSUNG HEROES better looking houses and began to ask from door to door if any one was needed for work. Finally a woman came to the door, opened it just a Uttle way and peeped out as though she were afraid. As Harriet was asking for work, the lady told her to wait a moment while she ran back and pushed her frying-pan further back on the stove. She appeared again at the door, questioned Har riet and then told her to come in, Harriet walked in and stood listening to the lady's instructions about cleaning. Then she raised the windows and began to sweep. She swept and dusted and cleaned all day. She worked hard the next day and every day until pay-day, when she received her first money. She hid it away with great care and continued her work. The following pay-days she went to the same spot and hid away every penny of her money until she felt that she had enough to go back South. She gave up her work and traveled night after night until she was again back on the plantation. She hid around among the slaves in their cabins. She whispered to them thrilling stories of the free country, until even women with babies were get ting ready to follow her back to the North. After drugging their babies with paregoric and placing HARRIET TUBMAN [ 95 them in baskets which they carried on their arms, they set out with "Moses", as they called her, for the free country. They forded rivers, climbed mountains, went through the swamps, threaded the forests with their feet sore and often bleeding. They traveled during the night and kept in hiding during the day. One of the men fell by the wayside. Harriet took out her pistol, and pointing it at his head, said, "Dead men tell no tales; you go on or die!" He arose trembling and dragged along with the party until they reached the North. As soon as Harriet had landed this party, she began working again and making preparations to go back on her next trip. One night she went back to the plantation, secured a horse and a two- wheel cart and drove away with her aged mother and father. After placing them on the train, she traveled in the cart night after night until she made her way through Maryland to WUmington, Delaware, where she had sent her parents. As soon as the three of them met in Wilming ton, Harriet took her parents to a well-known un derground railroad station. This was simply the home of a Quaker friend. He gave them food and shelter and each a new pair of shoes. He fur nished Harriet with money to take her parents 96 ] UNSUNG HEROES on to Canada, and kept the horse and cart for sale, Harriet and her parents went on, making their way with difficulty, untU they reached Canada, Harriet remained in Canada for a short time only, then slipped back among the plantation cabins in Maryland, Again and again she went back — nineteen times — leading away in the dark ness, in all, over three hundred slaves. The slave masters of that region in Maryland, whence so many were being stolen away, after trying hard to catch Harriet, offered a reward of $40,000 for her, dead or alive. They posted such a notice in aU public places. After fifteen years of such adventure, Harriet bought a little home place near Auburn, N, Y,, and settled on it with her dear old parents. Fre quently responding to a knock at the door, she arose and found that some one had brought to her a poor, old, homeless person. Without hesitating to ask many questions, she took in every one of them until she had twenty old people, for whom she worked and sought support, William H. Seward, Governor of New York, once said to her when she went to him for aid, "Harriet, you have worked for others long enough. If you would ever ask anything for your- HARRIET TUBMAN [ 97 self, I would gladly give it to you but I will not help you to rob yourself for others any longer". Many years after that, Governor Seward died, and a large number of persons gathered at his funeral. Many very beautiful flowers were re ceived by his family on that sad occasion. On the day of the funeral, just before the coffin was closed, a woman as black as night stole quietly in and laid a wreath of field flowers at his feet and as quietly glided out again. Friends of the family whispered, "It's the Governor's friend, Harriet". Harriet continued to work and take in homeless old people until the outbreak of the Civil War. At that time. Governor Andrew of Massachu setts sent for her. He asked if she would go South as a spy and a scout, and if need be, a hospital nurse for the Union soldiers. She stood thinking for a moment, then said that she would go. He bade her return home and be ready at a moment's notice. Harriet left his office and re turned to Auburn. She went about asking friends to look out for the old people in her home while she was away. Soon after she reached home, a messenger ar rived with orders for her to report immediately. She hastily grabbed a few necessary things, kissed 98 ] UNSUNG HEROES her parents, saying good-bye to them and to the inmates of the home, and hm-ried away to join the company of soldiers on its way south. They trav eled several days. As soon as they arrived, Har riet was ordered to act as a scout and a spy for the soldiers. She took charge and led them through the jungle and the swamp. She ap proached the frightened slaves, often gaining valuable information from them. She stood in the battle-line when the shots were faUing like hail and the bodies of dead and wounded men were dropping like leaves in autumn. Being called upon to nurse the soldiers in the hospitals, she extracted from roots and herbs what she called a healing substance. As she went to a sick soldier and felt his burning forehead, she often poured out a spoonful of her medicine and placed it in his mouth. After a few days of such treatment frequently a soldier smiled at her and thanked her. She often bathed the wounds of soldiers from early morning until late at night. She nursed many with smallpox. OccasionaUy, after a long day's toil, she went to her little cabin and made fifty pies, several pans of ginger-bread and two casks of root-beer. One of the men went through the camps selling these things for her. Almost HARRIET TUBMAN [ 99 as soon as she obtained the money from the sale of them she mailed it on to her old parents for the support of their home. Once while Harriet was on this trip she went with some gunboats up the Combahee River. The frightened slaves along the way left their work and took to the woods. Some of those who fled peeped out from behind trees at the gunboats and ran away like deer when they heard the sound of the steam whistle. One old man said, "WeU, Master said the Yankees had horns and tails but I never believed it till now". Eight hundred of these people were taken on board the gunboats to be carried to Beaufort, S. C. Some of them be fore going aboard grabbed from the fire and placed on their heads pails of smoking rice. Others had on their backs a bag with a pig in it ; and some carried two pigs in their bags. Soon after this trip Harriet returned to her little home place, which was about to be sold to pay off a mortgage. A friend, the daughter of a professor of Auburn Theological Seminary, hearing of Harriet's trouble, came to see her. Harriet greeted her friend as usual and invited her to sit down; she too sat down and began to teU about the war. Her friend listened for a long, long time but finally interrupted her to ask about 100 ] UNSUNG HEROES the home and the mortgage. Harriet, conceahng nothing from her, told her the exact conditions of the mortgage. The friend suggested the idea of having her life story written as a means of getting money to pay off the mortgage. Harriet nodded her head in full agreement with what her friend was proposing and asked if she would write the story. The friend counted aloud the days before the mortgage had to be paid off and, realizing that they were not many, set herself at once to the task of writing the story of Harriet's life. Harriet sat with her friend day after day, each time telling of some incident in her life which she had not told before. The story was finally finished and published, and from the proceeds of it the mortgage was paid off. Harriet worked hard, saying all the time that she wished to free the home of debt so that she might give it to her race to be used as an Old Folks' Home. "When the property was almost free of debt and there were twenty aged women in the home, she went among them with a smile dividing the little she had, untU she was stricken with pneumonia and died. Following her death, the Harriet Tubman Club HARRIET TUBMAN [ 101 of New York City, together with the whole Em pire State Federation of Negro Women's Clubs, erected to her memory a handsome monument. This monument is in the form of a shaft. One of the principal designs on this shaft is in the form of three oak logs out of which fiowers are growing. The citizens of Auburn held a memorial meet ing for her at the Auditorium Theatre. Booker T. Washington, the mayor and the ex-mayor of Auburn were the speakers on that occasion. The lower floor of the theatre was fflled and every box was occupied. In one box sat a group of Civil War veterans and in another sat the leading so ciety women of Auburn. On the stage sat the Auburn Festival Chorus and Orchestra and the guests. In the presence of this audience, Harriet Tub man's grand-niece unveiled a large bronze tablet — the gift of the citizens of Auburn to the memory of Harriet Tubman. In accepting this tablet, the mayor of the city said, "In recognition of Harriet Tubman's unselfish devotion to the cause of hu manity, the city of Auburn accepts this tablet dedicated to her memory". The tablet was placed in the county court-house with the following inscription: 102 ] UNSUNG HEROES In Memoht of HARRIET TUBMAN Born a slave in Maryland about 1821 Died in Auburn, N. Y., March 10, 1913 Called the "Moses" of her people during the Civil War. With rare courage, she led over 300 Negroes up from slavery to freedom, and rendered invalu able service as nurse and spy. With implicit trust in God, she braved every danger and overcame every obstacle; withal she possessed extraordinary foresight and judgment, so that she truthfully said, "On my underground raUroad I never ran my train off the track and I never lost a passenger." ALEXANDER SERGYEYEVICH PUSHKIN Chapter V ALEXANDER SERGYEYEVICH PUSHKIN Poet and Dramatist 1799-1837 ONCE upon a time there lived in Moscow, Russia, a Uttle boy whose name was Alexan der Pushkin. Sometimes people would look at him and whisper, "Is he not homely? He is just like his great-grandfather. His great grandfather, Abram Hannibal, an African, was captured on the shores of Africa and brought to Constantinople as a slave. Abram Hannibal's son, Hannibal, who was Pushkin's grandfather, was a distinguished Russian general during the reign of Katherine II". Pushkin's mother often looked at him as he sat in a sort of stupor and pitied him. His father would come into the house, kiss the other children, and pay no attention to him. His grandmother and his nurse often wondered why he would not run and play like the other children. Sometimes his nurse would take him by the hand and spin around the room while she sang to him. One day after such a spin, his grandmother caUed out, speaking in no uncertain tones, "Alex- [105] 106 ] UNSUNG HEROES ander, Alexander, come here !" As he approached her in a sleepy fashion, she said, "Not awake yet! Oh, if I could be a bear just for a moment, I'd make you run — Boo!" she added, as she jumped at him. He laughed and tore around the room like a little pony. She looked on in great surprise. He ran and ran until he was all tired out, then he rushed up to her, grabbed her about the waist, saying, "Tell me about the three hundred and fifty big lobsters again, please, grandmother". "Sit down then. If you will Usten now, I may tell you about many other things which I have seen in Russia", she said. She began, "In St. Petersburg, which is the capital of Russia, there is a large palace caUed the Winter Palace. This palace is the largest building in Europe. In it there are large rooms called state rooms. The walls of these rooms are covered with gold plates and dishes. There are also five hundred other rooms. The ballroom holds five thousand guests, aUowing a place for the musicians and space for dancing. Sometimes great suppers are prepared for the balls. "At one of these balls, once upon a time, the waiters brought in three hundred and fifty dishes of chicken, each dish containing three chickens with salad and jelly ; three hundred and fifty large ALEXANDER SERGYEYEVICH PUSHKIN [ 107 lobsters, with mayonnaise sauce; three hundred and fifty tongues ; three hundred and fifty dishes of cold meats; three hundred and fifty dishes of ices ; three hundred and fifty dishes of creams and jellies; several hundred gallons of soup of differ ent kinds, and two thousand bundles of asparagus boiled for the salads. In addition to this, they brought in cakes, biscuits, fruit and wine". "Whew! The people must have burst after eat ing aU of that!" exclaimed Alexander. "Listen, now", continued his grandmother. "Then there is in this palace one room with eight pairs of doors made of tortoise-shell, trimmed with gold. There is also a picture-gallery containing some of the finest works of art. There is a museum in which aU sorts of reUcs are found — even the stuffed horse and dogs of Peter the Great. Here and there among the state rooms there are winter gardens. And in one of these gardens, there are hundreds of canary birds fiitting among the palms and over the fountains of gold-fish. There are writing tables and presses which on being opened play beautiful tunes." "Can anybody open these tables, grand mother?" Alexander asked. "No", she said, "only by special permission can people enter the palace." 108 ] UNSUNG HEROES "Is all of this really true, grandmother?" Alex ander asked again. "Yes, indeed", his grandmother said. They sat for a few moments without saying a word. Alexander nestled closer to his grand mother and kissed her on the cheek. She smiled and, shuddering a bit, said: "But oh, the poor people of Russia! They live in two-room cabins. In one of these cabins sometimes as many as eleven older people and twenty-five children live. They actu ally knock each other down many times in moving about the cabin. One of the rooms usually has in it a stove, a table, a wooden bench, two chairs, and a lamp, if the family is not too poor to have it. The other room often has in it no furniture at aU. The father and mother and as many of the chil dren as can be fitted on top of the stove, sleep there. The others use pillows and lie on the floor in their clothing". She stopped talking, Ustened for a moment, then said, "I hear the nurse coming, I must go now". She rose. Alexander caught her by the hands. She said, "Next time, grandmother wUl tell you more. She will tell you about a great big bell which weighs nearly four thousand pounds. At least forty men can stand under it. Let me go". Alexander was really awake now. He stretched ALEXANDER SERGYEYEVICH PUSHKIN [ 109 his eyes and said, "Oh — Oh, forty men under one beU, whew!" His grandmother hurried out, found the nurse and told her how wide-awake Alexander seemed. The nurse gleefully took out a little book and wrote: "Alexander wakes up in the year 1807, when he is eight years old". She went for him and took him for a walk. Much of the time, he ran ahead of her, playing and calling back to her. From this time on, he read books, among which was his uncle's book of poems. At the age of ten he began to write poems and little plays himself. His father, deeply interested in him now, sent him at the age of twelve to a very expensive school which only the sons of the nobility could attend. Young Pushkin began at once to criticise the school and the teachers. He read in the library and wrote poems the greater part of each day. His first poems were published when he was fif teen years old. Soon after this, he began to edit the school paper and further neglect his studies, Duiing his six years in this school, his reports were entirely unsatisfactory to his parents. On leaving school, he became a clerk for the Russian Government, He mingled in the gay est society and soon offended the government by writing a poem called "Ode to Liberty". He 110 ] UNSUNG HEROES was immediately hurried far away to Southern Russia. One day, on his way to a neighboring town in Southern Russia, he met a band of gypsies whom he joined, and with whom he trav eled for a while. Pushkin soon offended some one in Southern Russia, and had to be sent to his father's estate, in a still more remote part of the country. His father did not even permit him to associate with the other children. However, he spent his time during these two years in this far-away section viTiting poetry. After returning to St, Petersburg, he went to a ball one evening, and there met a young girl fifteen years old, with whom he danced. They be gan to correspond, and three years later were married. Pushkin was then receiving a salary of $2,550 a year. He and his wife entertained lav ishly and wore the best of clothing; therefore he had to borrow a great deal of money. His anxiety about money seemed to haunt him to the extent that all inclination to write poetry fled. He and his brother-in-law engaged in many quarrels, Pushkin finaUy chaUenged him to a duel. His brother-in-law accepted. On the eighth of February, 1837, they met face to face, each with a sharp weapon in his hand. Each made a thrust at the other. The brother-in-law jumped ALEXANDER SERGYEYEVICH PUSHKIN [ 111 aside, warding off the blow, but Pushkin fell writhing, with the blood streaming from his wound. Two days later he died in St, Petersburg. After his death the Czar of Russia furnished $76,500 to publish his works and to pay off his debts. A great celebration was held at Moscow in 1880 in memory of him. It was said to be the greatest event in Russian literary history. Dur ing this celebration, a statue of Pushkin, the great national poet of Russia, was erected at Moscow. His greatest poem bears the title "Eugenie Onyegin" and his greatest drama is "Boris Godunoff". THE BIRDLET (Translated from the Russian by Ivan Panin) God's birdlet knows Nor care, nor toil; Nor weaves it painfully An everlasting nest. Thro' the long night on the twig it slumbers ; When rises the red sun Birdie listens to the voice of God And it starts, and it sings. When Spring, Nature's Beauty, And the burning summer have passed. And the fog, and the rain. By the late fall are brought. Men are wearied, men are grieved. But birdie flies into distant lands. Into warm climes, beyond the blue sea: Flies away until the spring. 112 ] UNSUNG HEROES WINTER MORNING (Translated from the Russian by Ivan Panin) Frost and sun — the day is wondrous ! Thou still art slumbering, charming friend. 'Tis time, O Beauty, to awaken: Ope' thine eyes, now in sweetness closed, To meet the Northern Dawn of Morning. Thyself a north-star do thou appear! Last night, remember, the storm scolded. And darkness floated in the clouded sky; Like a yellow, clouded spot Thro' the clouds the moon was gleaming — And melancholy thou wert sitting — But now . , , thro' the window cast a look: Stretched beneath the heavens blue — Carpet-like magnificent — In the sun the snow is sparkling; Dark alone is the wood transparent. And thro' the hoar gleams green the fir. And under the ice the rivulet sparkles. Entire is lighted with diamond splendor Thy chamber . . . with merry crackle The wood is crackling in the oven. To meditation invites the sofa. But know you. J" In the sleigh not order why The brownish mare to harness? Over the morning snow we gliding. Trust we shall, my friend, ourselves To the speed of impatient steed; Visit we shall the fields forsaken. The woods, dense but recently. And the banks so dear to me. ALEXANDER SERGYEYEVICH PUSHKIN [ 113 THE GYPSIES (Translated from the Russian by Ivan Panin) Over the wooded banks. In the hour of evening quiet. Under the tents are song and bustle And the fires are scattered. Thee I greet, O happy race ! I recognize thy blazes, I myself at other times These tents would have followed. With the early rays to-morrow Shall disappear your freedom's trace. Go you will — but not with you Longer go shall the bard of you. He alas, the changing lodgings. And the pranks of days of yore Has forgot for rural comforts And for the quiet of a home. BLANCHE KELSO BRUCE Chapter VI BLANCHE KELSO BRUCE Senator — Register of the U. S. Treasury 1841-1898 ON the first day of March, in the year 1841, a little slave boy started out from Farmville, Virginia, on a journey. The strange thing about it was, he did not know where he was going or how long the journey would take. However, he started out and traveled west and south and east and north for fifty-seven long years. After his first few years of experience on the road, he reached Brunswick, Missouri, The man ager of a little printing office in the town offered htm a job which attracted him. He accepted it and remained in Brunswick some years, assisting on a printing-press as a "printer's devil". At the noon hour, one day, he sat with his head buried in a newspaper. Some one said, as he slapped Bruce on the back, "Hello, Branch, what are you doing way out here?" Bruce seemed greatly surprised to hear some one call him Branch, for he had long ago changed his name to Blanche. He raised his head and looked all around but did not see any one, and so he went [117] 118 ] UNSUNG heroes on with his reading. After a short time, "flap" went a sound. Something had slapped him on the back of his neck. He jumped up and looked around but still did not see any one. Then he said in a loud voice, "WTio are you, anyhow? Stop slapping me". And with that, he sat down again, A little shrill voice answered, "Yes, you are out here working on a printing-press. I've been fol lowing you. You came aU the way from Virginia, What do you know about a printing-press? In the early days no one at all could do any printing in your state, because the state did not aUow it", Blanche Bruce scowled and frowned and looked all around but did not see any one. And so he shouted out, "Oh hush! I've been reading aU about printing. In the early days none of the American colonies encouraged printing. Some of the print ers were even arrested for printing. For thirty years Cambridge, Massachusetts, was the only place in America where printing was done, and that was controlled by the Government, Now, you shut up!" After that, he arose and went in to begin his work. For years, Bruce says, he heard no more of the little voice, but he could not forget that experi ence. In spite of it, he worked in Brunswick untU BLANCHE KELSO BRUCE [ 119 he decided to move on to Lawrence, Kansas. By this time, of course, he had grovni a great deal in height and size. His love for books had not waned, and his experience in the Civil War had taught him a great deal. Seeing that the few Negro children in Law rence were ignorant, he opened a school for them, but finding later that there were more children in Hannibal, Missouri, who needed a school, he went there and began teaching. Bruce kept on thinking and moving until one day, in the year 1866, he found himself at Ober lin, Ohio, sawing wood. "WTiew! I am so tired, I believe I'll sit down on this log and rest a while", he said to himself, as he wiped the perspiration from his forehead with his hand. No sooner had he sat down, than "flap" went something across his back. He jumped up, looked all around and said to himself, "That's strange!" "Yes, it is strange", said a little shrill voice, "but I've been following you all the time, I hear you are out here sawing wood to keep yourself in Oberlin College, Just keep at it". Bruce seemed really disturbed now, for this voice sounded exactly like that one in Brunswick, Missouri, years before. Said he in a gruff voice, "I don't know what you are, but get on away or 120 ] UNSUNG HEROES I'll saw you". He finished his sawing that day and sawed many more days before the end of the college year. In company with other students who were go ing to their homes for the summer, he left OberUn College bound for some place, he really did not know where. By some means he continued to travel, and finally found himself working on a big vessel which ran between CouncU Bluffs, Iowa, and St. Louis, Missouri, One day, after his vessel was anchored at St, Louis, he secured a news paper and sat down to his old trade. He read and read and finally came across an article which told how badly Mississippi was needing educated men. Many of her men had been kiUed in the war, and until more food was raised there was reaUy Uttle left for the people to eat. Bruce read some parts of the article a second time, and whUe he sat there, decided to start for Mississippi as soon as he could. The way soon opened, and after some days of travel, he found himself in Mississippi, Mississippi seemed to need him badly. Very soon, the mfli tary Governor- General of that State appointed him to take charge of the election in a whole county. The name of that county was Tallahat chie. He traveled over it from town to town, mak- BLANCHE KELSO BRUCE [ 121 ing speeches and influencing men, until after the election. Within a year, he met the Mississippi Legislature at Jackson and was elected as Ser geant-at-arms in the Senate. In this position, he assisted in many ways the one who presided over the Senate. If any one in the Senate was disor derly, he arrested him, Bruce kept on traveling until the Governor of Mississippi noticed him and appointed him as Tax Assessor of Bolivar County. He had to determine how much taxes the people in that county should pay. He afterwards stepped into the position of Sheriff and Tax CoUector, and then Superintend ent of Schools of that county. Before leaving Bolivar County, he bought a plantation, Blanche Kelso Bruce had been traveling for over thirty years now. The greatest milestone in his journey, he said to a friend one day, was now in sight. The State of Mississippi had elected him to represent her in the United States Senate at Washington, D. C. He knew little about the cus toms in the Senate, but one day he found himself sitting in the Senate Chamber ready to receive what was called his induction into office. Something within him, which sounded just as plainly as the shrill voice at Oberlin had sounded, seemed to say, "You will have no one to escort 122 ] UNSUNG HEROES you up the aisle like the other new senators have; but you have traveled all the way from FarmviUe, Virginia, as a slave, to Washington, D, C, as a senator, so go right ahead". Senator Bruce straightened up and said to him self, "Ah! I guess that's the something within me that has been following me all these years. It's my turn to go up now, and I am going". WTien he had gotten about half way up the aisle, a tall gentleman touched him on the arm. He stood for a moment as if he were dreaming or as if he were listening to the shrill voice again. But no, this was a real man who said to him, "Excuse me, Mr, Bruce, I did not until this moment see that you were without an escort. Permit me. My name is Conkling", He linked his arm in that of Senator Bruce and they marched up to the desk and back to their seats together. It was this man. Senator Roscoe Conkling of New York, who assisted Senator Bruce in gain ing the chairmanship of one committee in the Senate and in securing a place on other commit tees, A few years later, when a son was born to Senator and Mrs, Bruce, he was named Roscoe Conkling Bruce, in honor of the Senator. Although, as he had said, the greatest mUe- stone in his journey had been reached, and he had BLANCHE KELSO BRUCE [123 served in the Senate for six years, the journey was not yet completed. He went on and became Reg ister of the United States Treasury. One morning, as he sat in his office looking at a five-doUar bill, some one seemed to shake him. He looked up but there was nobody in the room but him. He said that he thought he had simply made a mistake, but soon something within that sounded just like the little shriU voice of bygone days seemed to say, "You've been a pretty good traveler. Here you are again, I hear that not a single paper doUar can be issued unless the name 'B, K. Bruce, Register of the Treasury', is stamped in the lower left-hand corner of it". Mr. Bruce now leaned back and laughed out right, "Ha! ha! ha!" He seemed to realize that all these years no voice outside of his inner self had been talking to him. He served in the position of Register of the Treasury for four years, then retired to private life as a platform lecturer. Later, he entered up on his duties as Recorder of Deeds of the District of Columbia and as a trustee of the Washington PubUc Schools. The end of his long fifty-seven- year journey, which came March 17, 1898, found him as Register of the United States Treasury for a second time. SAMUEL COLERIDGE-TAYLOR Chapter VII SAMUEL COLERIDGE-TAYLOR The Musician 1875-1912 IN one of the poorer quarters of London, Eng land, a curly-headed boy was seen one day playing marbles with one hand and holding a little violin in the other. Passers-by stopped to get a closer picture of the little marble-player with the violin until there was quite an audience surround ing him and the other boys at their play. Many of the people in the houses in that block, attracted by the crowd, either came to their doors or looked out of their windows. Among those attracted to their windows was the conductor of a theatre orchestra, who was giving a music lesson in a nearby house. He spied the little curly-headed boy with the violin, ran out and coaxed him into the house. After talking to the boy a few minutes, the orchestra conductor took the little violin and played a short, beautiful tune. The boy in turn agreed to play. The man set up before the child a simple violin selection and asked if he could play it. Without saying a word the little fellow [127] 128 ] UNSUNG HEROES looked at the sheet of music, Uf ted his little vioUn to his shoulder and began to play in perfect time and tune. The orchestra conductor stood looking on in surprise. When that selection was finished, he immediately set up another. This, too, the boy played with the same ease. After he had played several pieces in this man ner, the orchestra conductor with his arms about him asked his name. "Samuel Coleridge-Taylor is my name", re plied he. The orchestra conductor next asked the boy who his parents were and where he Uved. Little Coleridge-Taylor quickly answered the question and began to pull away from his new friend. The orchestra conductor, feeUng that the boy wished to get back to his fellow marble-play ers, patted him on the back, assured him that he would come to see him soon and let him go. Little Coleridge-Taylor ran every step of the way until he reached the place where he had been playing marbles with the boys. He looked aU around, but, seeing no one, set out for home. As soon as he reached home, he began to teU his mother about the man who played his little violin. The orchestra conductor spoke to each of his students that day about the curly-headed boy with the violin. Even in the middle of a lesson, he SAMUEL COLERIDGE-TAYLOR [129 stopped occasionally to speak about the boy. As soon as his day's work was done, he set out making his way to the street and the number of the house which Coleridge-Taylor had given him. He kept on looking up at the numbers on the houses until he reached the right one. He stepped up and rang the door-bell. Happily little Coleridge-Taylor came to the door; he at once recognized his new friend and invited him in. His mother, hearing a strange voice, came into the room, too, Coleridge-Taylor said, "This is the gentleman who played my violin, mother". The orchestra conductor bowed to her, intro duced himself and offered an apology for enter ing her home. Little Coleridge-Taylor joined with his mother in assuring the gentleman that that was all right. The orchestra conductor thanked them both, and began to tell of the musi cal gifts of the child and how he should be edu cated. For a long time the mother sat quietly listen ing. Finally she said, calling the orchestra con ductor by his name, "Mr. Beckwith, you do not understand. My boy's father. Dr. Daniel Hughes Taylor, left us alone when the boy was one year old, and my present husband is just a working man". All was quiet for a few minutes. 130 j UNSUNG HEROES Presently Mr, Beckwith said sympathetically, "Please tell me where the boy's father is". The sturdy young English mother, bracing her self up in her chair, said falteringly, "My boy's father came from his native country. Sierra Leone, Africa, to London, He entered University CoUege and was graduated as a medical student. His col lege career was so brilliant that he became a mem ber of the Royal College of Surgeons. He was also connected with the Royal College of Physi cians. As an assistant to another physician, he practiced for a while in London and did weU. "Unfortunately for him, his partner moved away and the patients refused to continue with my husband because he was an African. He be came discouraged and returned to his native coun try. My boy and I lived for five years with some of my friends in their three-room apartment. It was my friend's husband who gave Samuel the little violin a few months ago on his fifth birthday." Mr. Beckwith sat quietly listening to every word. Once or twice he took out his handkerchief and wiped his eyes. When the young mother had finished her touching story, he assured her of his deep interest and arose to go. However, before leaving, he asked if she would let the boy come SAMUEL COLERIDGE-TAYLOR [ 131 to him for a violin lesson the next day. She con sented and Mr. Beckwith, without further word, bade her and little Samuel good-night. The next day at the appointed hour, Uttle Sam uel and his mother found Mr. Beckwith's studio. Seeing the sign on the door "Walk In" they walked in and took their seats. The entire sur roundings — ^the beautiful room, the piano, the violins, the cabinet with its many pieces of music, held their attention. In the midst of this, Mr. Beckwith entered and bowed to them. He immediately called Coleridge- Taylor forth and began to give him a lesson. The little fellow took hold of his violin, at first a bit timidly, but with encouragement and assurance from his teacher he gradually played as though he had forgotten everything but the music before him. When his lesson was over he left the studio with beaming face but returned again and again for his lessons. When the child was six, Mr, Beckwith arranged for him to appear in a recital given by his students. Standing on a couple of boxes which raised him above the ferns on the platform, little Samuel drew forth much applause from the audience by his performance. He continued to study and take lessons of 132 J UNSUNG HEROES Beckwith. Finally, Mr, Beckwith succeeded in getting him into the Old British School, which was partly kept up by subscriptions from friends. The headmaster of the school, as the principal was called, welcomed the boy and soon began to pay attention to him and talk about his unusual ability. His schoolmates soon began to call him "Coaly", Sometimes a boy sitting behind "Coaly" would run his fingers through "Coaly's" silken mop of thick, black hair. Such attentions ahvays made "Coaly" smile. The headmaster and other masters, as the teachers were called, encouraged him to work hard on his music. His classmaster, fond of singing himself, created enthusiasm for the weekly sing ing lessons, during which Coleridge-Taylor stood on a table in front of the class and led with his violin. At the request of this teacher, Coleridge-Tay lor sat up one night, when he was only nine years old, and wrote an original tune for the hymn, "God Save the Queen". The next day, standing on a table in front of his class, he played the tune and sang it with his sweet treble voice untU his classmates learned to sing it too. He often sang for visitors without seeming to think that he had done any more than the other boys. SAMUEL COLERIDGE-TAYLOR [ 133 The time of the year soon came around when the headmaster began to make his annual visit to friends for funds for the school. As usual, he called upon the choirmaster of St. George's Pres byterian Church, who was always on the lookout for boys with good voices. After greeting him heartily and chatting with him a while, the choir master asked if there were any good voices in the school. The headmaster hesitated a moment and then said, "I have a little boy in my classes who takes to music as a fish takes to water, but he is a colored boy". The choirmaster repUed, saying, "Well, I am much more concerned about his voice than about his color; send him over to see me". The next day Coleridge-Taylor went to see the choirmaster. He seemed to hesitate and to shrink away when the choirmaster called him up to sing. However, as soon as he sang, the choirmaster en tered his name for the next vacancy in the choir. Just after Coleridge- Taylor left the choir master's home, the thought of offering prizes to the Old British School for a singing contest sud denly dawned upon the choirmaster. He thought the matter over carefully and laid it before the headmaster of the school, who in turn presented 134 ] UNSUNG HEROES it to the school. Twenty boys, among whom was Coleridge-Taylor, at once offered to enter the contest. A song called "Cherry Ripe" was se lected. For several weeks "Cherry Ripe" was practiced and talked about as the only school topic. The afternoon set for the contest finaUy came. All the boys assembled in the chapel, with the twenty boys in the contest occupying the front seats. While every one sat anxiously waiting for the singing to begin, the headmaster rose, stated the meaning of the occasion and called forth the first singer, A lad with confident air arose, walked to the platform and sang as though he thought he were a nightingale. Then another and another came forward until all had sung except one little bushy-headed, brown-skinned boy. All eyes were now fixed upon him as he made his way to the plat form with his usual shyness. He found his place and began to pour forth such sweet, true, meUow tones that all began to whisper softly, "Coaly has it. Coaly has it". The song was finished in the midst of uproarious applause. The judges went out quietly and soon returned with the ver dict unanimously in favor of "Coaly", Very soon after Coleridge-Taylor had won the prize this choirmaster. Colonel Herbert A, Wal ters by name, took him under his care and looked SAMUEL COLERIDGE-TAYLOR [ 135 after him until he became a man. Finding him quick, eager and< with a wonderful ear for music. Colonel Walters, in addition to teaching him some simple theory of music, gave him voice production and solo singing. He soon placed him in St, George's choir as solo boy. Coleridge-Taylor ap peared in many of St, George's concerts and later in those of another church as a singer and as a violinist. During aU these years, he had continued his vioUn lessons with Mr. Beckwith. When he was only twelve years old he was frequently sought out by music lovers and musicians to play for them on many important occasions. Now that he was solo boy in the choir it seemed that he had found a position for the remainder of his life, but all of a sudden, however, at the age of fifteen, his treble voice broke, making it impossible for him to con tinue as a solo boy. He remained as a member of the choir for ten years longer. Since he could not continue as vocal soloist. Colonel Walters set out to secure for him a start in the larger musical world, A London firm of piano makers, wishing to help Colonel Walters and the boy, offered to appren tice him to the piano-tuning trade. Colonel Wal ters thanked them very graciously but went away 136 ] UNSUNG HEROES saying that piano-tuning for such a musical genius would be even worse than using a fine razor to chop firewood. The colonel, although he was not a wealthy man, finally offered Coleridge-Taylor a higher musical education. Both Coleridge-Taylor and his mother thanked him enthusiasticaUy, The colonel, after visiting and comparing all the musi cal colleges in London, chose for his brown boy student the Royal CoUege of Music, Coleridge- Taylor was enroUed as a student in that college and began his study at the Christmas term of 1890. He was seemingly even more shy than usual ; however, he began to study the vioUn, the piano and harmony. Before a great while, each of his teachers in these subjects began to speak with enthusiasm about his success, Coleridge-Taylor, however, was really more interested in writing music than in anything else. During his first year in the college, he wrote some anthems which so attracted the attention of Colonel Walters that he brought them to the no tice of the professors, WhUe Coleridge-Taylor was under the instruction of one of the greatest of the college professors in his second year, he wrote four other anthems. These anthems so in terested all of the professors of the college that SAMUEL COLERIDGE-TAYLOR [ 137 they began to speak freely of him as a genius and a composer. For a long time, it had been the custom of the Royal College to offer nine scholarships to stu dents winning in a certain musical contest. Cole ridge-Taylor entered this contest during his third year in the college and won the scholarship for the best piece of music written. He composed so many pieces each year that when he was twenty years old the Royal College permitted him to give a concert at which he used practically his compo sitions only. Two years later, he appeared on the program of a students' concert as a composer. At the con clusion of his number, he ran upstairs and hid in the organ room. The applause, however, was so great that his professor, who had also been in tensely interested, found him and almost had to drag him down. From this time apparently the eyes of musical critics were focused on the young musician. Some times he would leave public gatherings and seek his mother's kitchen. There he would sit and sing over to her this or that tune which he had composed. During his fourth year in college, he v.^on an other prize for musical composition. FoUowing 138 ] UNSUNG HEROES this, there were few college concert programs in London which did not contain a musical number bearing Coleridge-Taylor's name. He took up the study of the pipe-organ and continued it for two terms but dropped it, saying, "The organ is far too mechanical and soulless for me", II Shortly after Coleridge-Taylor had completed his six years in the Royal College, he sat one after noon in his humble home on a dingy street in London, composing a difiicult piece of music. Near his doorway, an organ-grinder began to fill the air with his mechanical tunes. Coleridge- Taylor, greatly disturbed, threw down his pen, rushed out and bade the organ-gTinder go away. A neighbor also hurried out, asking as she shook her fist at Coleridge-Taylor and ran towards the organ-grinder, "WTiy are you sending this man away?" Coleridge-Taylor replied, "I am a composer of music, and I am engaged on a long com position. The grinding noise of that organ is serious for me", "WeU", said she, "my children like the organ as much as you dislike it. We have as much right to have it as you have to send the man SAMUEL COLERIDGE-TAYLOR [ 139 away. As for your piano, it is a good thing that it is interrupted, for there is too much of it for us". At that juncture a policeman came upon the scene, and the organ-grinder moved on. Coleridge-Taylor began to inquire about his neighbor's chUdren. He was told that she had tipped the organ-grinder to come and play out side of her house for the amusement of a sick child. When the organ-grinder came the next day, Coleridge-Taylor went out and talked with him about the time of his appearance there each day so that he might plan to avoid composing music at that time. Although his evening practice had seemingly become a real part of his life, for a long time he refrained from touching his piano during the night hours because of the sick child. Disturbed by all sorts of noises in that street, he and his mother's family moved to more quiet quarters. These new surroundings seemed to in spire him so that he was able to give evening violin lessons at the conservatory of music, conduct a small orchestral class and compose the music for "Hiawatha's Wedding Feast" during the same year. Early in the next year, Coleridge-Taylor re ceived from the oldest of the great English musi cal societies a commission, or a special invitation. 140 ] UNSUNG HEROES to write a selection for its Annual Festival. Overjoyed because of this invitation, he set to work at once and composed a piece called "Bal lade in A Minor". Soon he began his rehearsals with the orchestra and chorus which were to render it. He conducted these rehearsals until the very night of the concert, September 12, 1898. That night people from aU parts of London poured into the haU until it was crowded. The hour for the concert was at hand. The orchestra and the chorus were in their places. The orches tra conductor, Samuel Coleridge-Taylor, a Ught brown-skinned, quick-moving, poUshed young man, with bright eyes and a large head covered with rather long, thick, silken hair, entered. The audience, not knowing what he looked like, paused for a moment, then broke into a storm of applause. He bowed, took up his baton and gave the signal. The orchestra and then the chorus began. The first strains of the music seemed to charm the people. Each part followed with increasing in terest. At the close of the performance, the audi ence again broke forth with thunderous applause. Three times Coleridge-Taylor was compelled to come forward to acknowledge the appreciation of the audience. Many people crowded around him SAMUEL COLERIDGE-TAYLOR [ 141 and congratulated him and invited him out to social affairs. The next day the London papers were all praising Coleridge-Taylor both as a com poser and as an orchestra conductor. As soon as this event was over, he again turned his attention to Longfellow's "Hiawatha". He says that he committed the whole poem to mem ory and lived with the words until they became a part of him. Just two months after he conducted the "BaUade in A Minor", "Hiawatha's Wedding Feast", his next composition, was sung by the choir and orchestra of his own college — The Royal College of Music. On the evening of this concert, Royal College Hall buzzed with a crowded, expectant audience. Every seat was occupied. People were sitting on the steps of the platform and standing in the aisles. When everything was in readiness for the concert to begin. Sir Charles Stanford, a Profes sor in the Royal CoUege of Music, took up the baton. The trumpets gave out the simple, charm ing opening subject of the "Wedding Feast". The audience sat as if in a trance. Interest grew and grew as the words of Chibiabos, the friend of Hiawatha and the sweetest of all singers, were sung: 142 J UNSUNG HEROES Onaway ! Awake, beloved ! Thou the wild-flower of the forest! Thou the wild-bird of the prairie! Thou with eyes so soft and fawn-like! If thou only lookest at me, I am happy, I am happy As the lilies of the prairie. When they feel the dew npon them! When the last strains of the orchestra died away, the applause of the audience was loud and long, Coleridge-Taylor was called forth in the midst of the demonstration. He soon disappeared, only to be called back again and again. As the people departed from the concert, they saw Cole ridge-Taylor, greatly embarrassed because of his great success, dodging into doorways to get out of their sight. The next morning, he seemed to be even more embarrassed as he glanced at the newspapers and saw in large headlines his name mentioned as a great musician, III One evening, long before this concert, every light in the home of the Walmisleys, a well-to-do English family, burned with unusual brightness. Vases and bowls of beautiful flowers scented the atmosphere, Mr. and Mrs, Walmisley, assisted by their attractive and accomplished daughter Jessie, stood in their large parlors receiving their SAMUEL COLERIDGE-TAYLOR [143 guests, among whom was Coleridge-Taylor. In the midst of the festivities, it was announced that Coleridge-Taylor would play a violin selection. He came forth and began to play to the piano accompaniment of Miss Jessie Walmisley, who was also a student at the Royal College of Music, The hush of sUence which always possessed audi ences when Coleridge-Taylor played his violin, at once stole over this happy group of cultured people. When he had finished, his hearers called him back several times. As the guests departed from the Walmisley home that evening, they were aU talking about their charming hostess and the genius of the young violinist. Some months later. Miss Walmisley's profes sors required her to practice some violin and piano duets as vacation exercises. In her search for some one with whom to practice, she thought of the talented young Negro whom she had accom panied at her mother's party. She wrote to the College for his address but through mistake, the address of another player by the name of Cole ridge was sent to her. She went in search of him. Although disappointed at meeting the wrong per son, she continued her inquiry and search until she found the home of Coleridge-Taylor. His mother came to the door. Upon Miss 144 ] UNSUNG HEROES Walmisley's request to see him about practicing with her, his mother said, "I will ask him if he can see you". Two minutes later Coleridge-Taylor himself came to the door smUing and shaking his head, saying, "Can't do it now, can't possibly do it now, I am writing a quartet". She repUed as she started off, "I am sorry to have troubled you". He stood looking at her and rather suddenly said, "Wait a moment", "I could not think of bothering you now", she repUed. Coleridge-Taylor ran out and insisted that she come in. While she waited, he hurried back to his room and wrote down some notes. Soon he came forward again with a smile, saying, "I can give you an hour". They practiced just one hour. After thanking him many times. Miss Walmisley started to go, but suddenly hesitated to ask if he could possibly help her again. He consented, and at the close of each practice he kept on promising a little more time. Perhaps before they fuUy reaUzed it, two years had passed and they had become fast musi cal friends. She joined his orchestral class and assisted him greatly. SAMUEL COLERIDGE-TAYLOR [145 Their friendship, both reaUzed, had steadily ripened. Miss Walmisley seemed puzzled to know whether she should permit herself to love Coleridge-Taylor. She ceased for a time to meet him or to have anything at aU to do with his class. During this period of freedom from his company, she realized that she really loved him, and she made up her mind to stand by him. They soon became engaged. After this, whenever it was convenient and fit ting. Miss Walmisley would read through proofs of his compositions and sing his new songs for him. One day whUe they were attending a con cert in a town near London, the usher announced to their surprise and embarrassment, their en gagement. During these days, Coleridge-Taylor was com posing almost without stopping except for his meals and a long walk with Miss Walmisley each day. With invitations to write for great occasions pouring in upon him, he composed "The Death of Minnehaha", "The Song of Hiawatha" and other numbers. The theme of "The Song of Hiawatha" Coleridge-Taylor says he took from a plantation melody, "Nobody Knows the Trouble I've Seen", which he had recently heard sung by the famous Fisk Jubilee Singers. It was through these sing- 146 j UNSUNG HEROES ers, says he, that he first learned to appreciate the beautiful Negro folk songs. Now that Coleridge-Taylor, at the age of twenty-four, felt sure of his ability to support a family, he and Miss Walmisley planned a quiet wedding in a little church in Croydon. In their attempt to keep the matter a secret, they ordered an old rickety, weather-beaten carriage to wait outside of the church to take them away after the wedding. To their surprise, the news of the wed ding had leaked out and when they entered the church, there sat a church fuU of friends waiting for the ceremony. Immediately jfoUowing the ceremony Coleridge-Taylor and his bride left the town for two weeks. During that time Coleridge-Taylor continued his work on "Hiawatha's Departure", which was afterwards given by a famous choir and orchestra of a thousand members, with the composer as the conductor, Coleridge-Taylor soon became a professor in the University of London. He was spoken of as one of the three greatest British orchestra con ductors of his time. During the thirteen years of his happy married life, he was busy composing music, teaching and conducting orchestras. It SAMUEL COLERIDGE-TAYLOR [ 147 was during these years that his two children — Gwendolen and Hiawatha — were born. He traveled England from end to end and vis ited America four times. On his third visit to America, he wrote the first sketches of "A Tale of Old Japan", which came next in popularity to "Hiawatha", The greater part of 1912 was gloomy, and the sun failed to shine in England, Coleridge-Taylor seemed sad because of this, but he worked hard and so completely finished up all of his composi tions that he said to his wife, "I have never felt so free of work in my life". He planned to go to the seashore but his son Hiawatha contracted influenza in a severe storm, and so he remained at home and amused himself by taking long walks. One morning he said, "I have had a lovely dream", "What, another lovely dream? What is it this time?" said Mrs. Coleridge-Taylor. He answered, "Oh, I dreamt I saw Hurlstone in Heaven. [Hm-lstone was a friend who had re cently died,] I was just entering. We didn't speak but we embraced each other. That means I am going to die". Mrs. Coleridge-Taylor, insist ing that it was only a dream, tried in vain to cheer him. 148 ] UNSUNG HEROES One August morning of this gloomy year, Gwendolen and he went out and bought some yellow chrysanthemums for Mrs. Coleridge- Tay lor. On their return Coleridge-Taylor gave them to his wife and bade her good-bye. He left to go to a moving-picture show but became suddenly ill, and fell at the station where he bought his ticket. With difficulty he reached home. For several days, he did not seem to be dangerously iU, but acute pneumonia soon developed. He became steadily worse. On Sunday of that week, Sep tember 1st, he was propped up in bed with a pillow. He seemed to imagine an orchestra before him and an audience behind him. He conducted a performance, beat time with both arms and smiled his approval here and there. That smUe never left his face. StiU smiUng and conducting, he sank back on his piUow and passed away. The funeral services were held at St. Michael's Church, Croydon, England, September 5, 1912. People came from all parts of England, Many were in the church long before the services began. Mr. H, L. Balfour, organist of the Royal Choral Society, played during this period of waiting, se lections from Coleridge-Taylor's works. Among them was a selection from "Hiawatha's Wedding Feast" — "Chibiabos, the sweetest of aU singers, SAMUEL COLERIDGE-TAYLOR [ 149 the best of aU musicians". The beautiful slow movement from Coleridge-Taylor's violin Con certo in G Minor, which was not then pubUshed, was played also. The services closed with his funeral march from "The Death of Minnehaha". The inscription on the headstone which marks his grave reads as follows : In Memoet of SAMUEL COLERIDGE-TAYLOR who died on September 1, 1912 at the age of 37 Bequeathing to the World A Heritage of an undying Beauty. His Music Lives. It was his own, and drawn from vital fountains. It pulsed with his own life, But now it is his immortality. He lives while music lives. Too young to die — His great simplicity, his happy courage In an alien world. His gentleness made all that knew him love him. Sleep, crowned with fame, fearless of change or time; Sleep, like remembered music in the soul. Silent, immortal; while our discords climb To that great chord which shall resolve the whole. Silent, with Mozart, on that solemn shore; Secure, where neither waves nor hearts can break; Sleep, till the master of the world once more Touch the remembered strings and bid thee wake. BENJAMIN BANNEKER Chapter VIII BENJAMIN BANNEKER Astronomer and Surveyor 1732-1804 I Childhood ONE winter evening long ago, everything in Baltimore County, Maryland, was covered with deep snow. Icicles nearly a foot long hung from the roofs of the rough log cabins. The trees of the thick forest which extended for miles around stood Uke silent ghosts in the stiUness, for no one in all that wooded country stirred out on such an evening. Far away from the other cabins stood the Ban neker cabin. Little Benjamin Banneker was busy before a glowing wood fire roasting big, fat chest nuts in the hot embers. His grandmother sat in the corner in a quaint split-bottom, white-oak chair, knitting and telling him about her native country, England, [153] 154 ] UNSUNG HEROES She said, "When I was in England, milking the cows on a cattle farm was a part of my daily duties. One day I was accused of stealing a pail of milk which had in fact been kicked over by the cow. Instead of meting out a more severe punish ment, the officers of the law sentenced me to be shipped to America. Being unable to pay for my passage, I was sold, upon my arrival in America, to a tobacco planter on the Patapsco River to serve a period of seven years to pay the cost of my passage". Silence reigned for a few moments, then she continued, "I worked out my period of service, then bought a part of the farm on which I had worked. I also bought two African slaves from a ship in the Chesapeake Bay. One of the slaves, your grandfather, the son of an African king, had been stolen from the coast of Africa". Little Benjamin then asked, pointing to his grandfather, who was sitting on the other side of the hearth, "Was grandfather that man, grand mother?" "Yes", she said. She continued her story, end ing with a beautiful description of the River Thames, the Tower of London, and Westminster Abbey. benjamin BANNEKER [ 155 All was still for a while, except for the occa sional moving of Benjamin and the bursting of chestnuts. Benjamin's grandfather, who was sit ting with his eyes closed, now broke the silence. Said he, "Benjamin, what are you going to be when you are a man, a chestnut roaster?" "I am going to be — I am going to be — what is it, grandmother? You know you told me a story about the man who knew all the stars", said Ben jamin. "An astronomer", replied his grandmother. "That's it, I am going to be an astronomer", answered Benjamin. "You have changed in the last day or two, then", said his grandfather. "The day your grand mother told you about the man who could figure so well with his head, you said you would be that". "That man was a born mathematician", sug gested his grandmother. Benjamin began to blink his eyelids rapidly and to twist and turn for an answer. Soon his mouth flew open saying, "Well, I'll be both, I'll be both!" His grandmother interrupted by saying, "I wonder what has become of my little inventor? Benjamin, you remember what you said when I told you the story about that inventor". 156 ] UNSUNG HEROES Benjamin gave that look which always said, "WeU, I am caught" ; but soon he recovered and with this reply, "I can tell you what I am going to do, I am going to school first to leam to figure. And then while I am farming a little for my Uving I can stay up at night and watch the stars. And in the afternoon I can study and invent things untU I am tired, and then I can go out and watch my bees". "When are you going to sleep, my boy?" asked his grandmother. "In the morning", said he. "And you are going to have a farm and bees, too?" she asked. "Yes, grandmother", said Benjamin, "we might just as well have something whUe we are here. Father says that he will never take mother and me to his native country — Africa — to Uve. Grandmother, did you and grandfather have any children besides mother?" "Yes, there were three other children", replied his grandmother. "When father and mother were married", said Benjamin, "mother didn't change her name at aU from Mary Banneker as the ladies do now, but father changed his name to Robert Banneker. BENJAMIN BANNEKER [157 I am glad of it, for you see you are Banneker, grandfather is Banneker, I am Banneker and all of us are Bannekers now". "My boy", interrupted his grandfather, "I am waiting to hear how you are going to buy a farm." "Oh, grandfather", said Benjamin as he arose, "you remember that mother and father gave Mr, Gist seven thousand pounds of tobacco and Mr, Gist gave them one hundred acres of land here in Baltimore County. Grandfather, don't you think father wiU give me some of this land? He cannot use it all." "Yes, when you are older, Benjamin. But you must go to school and learn to read first", an swered his grandfather. "Yes but — ouch, that coal is hot!" cried Ben jamin as he shook his hand, danced about the floor and buried his fingers in a pillow. That time he had picked up a hot coal instead of a chestnut. Some time after his fingers were "doctored" and he was apparently snug in bed for the night, he shook his hands and cried out for his grandmother, Benjamin rose the next morning, and after breakfast, began again to roast chestnuts. Morn ing after morning he roasted chestnuts until the snow had aU cleared away. Then he entered a pay 158 ] UNSUNG HEROES school and soon learned to read, write and do some arithmetic. After some months had passed he began to borrow books and to study by himself. II Farmer and Mathematician When Benjamin was about twenty-seven, his father died. As he had prophesied when he was a boy, his father's farm bought with the tobacco, became his. On this farm was Banneker's house — a log cabin about half a mUe from the Patapsco River. In his doorway he often stood looking at the near and distant beautiful hiUs along the banks of this river. What he said about his bees when he was a boy came true also. These he kept in his orchard; and in the midst of this or chard a spring which never f aUed, babbled beneath a large golden willow tree. His beautiful garden and his well-kept grounds seemed to give him pleasure. Banneker never married, but lived alone in retirement after the death of his mother. He cooked his own food and washed his own clothes. All who knew him, and especially those who saw that he was a genius, spoke well of him. He always greeted his visitors cheerfully, and he benjamin banneker [159 kept a book in which was written the name of every person by whose visit he felt greatly honored. Some one who knew him well says that he was a brave-looking, pleasant man with something very noble in his face. He was large and some what stout. In his old age he wore a broad- brimmed hat which covered his thick suit of white hair. He always wore a superfine, drab broad cloth coat with a straight collar and long waist coat. His manners, some one says, were those of a perfect gentleman — kind, generous, hospitable, dignified, pleasing, very modest and unassuming. He worked on his farm for his living, but found time to study all the books which he could borrow. He studied the Bible, history, biography, travels, romance, and other books, but his greatest interest was in mathematics. Like many other scholars of his day, he often amused himself during his leisure by solving hard problems. Scholars from many parts of the country often sent him difficult problems. It is said that he solved every one sent to him and he often sent in return an original question in rhyme. For example, he sent the following question to Mr, George ElUcott, which was solved by a scholar of Alexandria: 160 j UNSUNG heroes A Cooper and Vintner sat down for a talk. Both being so groggy, that neither could walk. Says Cooper to Vintner, "I'm the first of my trade; There's no kind of vessel but what I have made. And of any shape. Sir — ^just what you will; And of any size. Sir — from a ton to a gUl !" "Then", says the Vintner, "you're the man for me — Make me a vessel, if we can agree. The top and the bottom diameter define. To bear that proportion as fifteen to nine ; Thirty-five inches are just what I crave. No more and no less, in the depth will I have. Just thirty-nine gallons this vessel must hold. Then I will reward you with silver and gold. Give me your promise, my honest old friend?" "I'll make it to-morrow, that you may depend !" So the next day the Cooper his work to discharge. Soon made the new vessel, but made it too large ; He took out some staves, which made it too small. And then cursed the vessel, the Vintner and all. He beat on his breast, "By the Powers I" he swore He never would work at his trade any more ! Now, my worthy friend, find out, if you can. The vessel's dimensions and comfort the man. Ill Inventor and Astronomer When Banneker was about thirty-eight years old he sat day after day working on a clock. Finally he finished it with his imperfect tools and with only a borrowed watch for a model. He had never seen a clock for there was not one, it is said, within fifty miles of him. An article published in benjamin banneker [ 161 London, England, in 1864, says that Banneker's clock was probably the first clock every part of which was made in America. For many hours and days he turned and adjusted the hands of his clock until they moved smoothly and the clock struck on the hour. Time passed, and after some years Mr. George EUicott's family — Quakers from Pennsylvania they were — began to build flour-mills, a store and a post-office in a vaUey adjoining Banneker's farm. Banneker was now fifty-five years old, and had won the reputation of knowing more than any other person in that county. Mr. ElUcott opened his library to him. He gave him a book which told of the stars. He gave him tables about the moon. He urged him to work out problems for almanacs. Early every evening Banneker wrapped him self in a big cloak, stretched out upon the ground and lay there aU night looking at the stars and planets. At sunrise he rose and went to his house. He slept and rested all the morning and worked in the afternoon. His neighbors peeped through the cracks of his house one morning and saw him resting. They began at once to call him a lazy fellow who would come to no good end. In spite of this, he compiled an almanac. His first almanac was pubUshed for the year 1792, 162 ] UNSUNG heroes It SO interested one of the great men of the coun try that he wrote to two almanac publishers of Baltimore about it. These publishers gladly pub lished Banneker's almanac. They said that it was the work of a genius, and that it met the hearty approval of distinguished astronomers, Banneker wrote Thomas Jefferson, then Sec retary of State, on behalf of his people, and sent him one of his almanacs, Mr, Jefferson replied : Philadelphia, August 30, 1791. Sir — I thank you sincerely for your letter of the 19th inst. and for the almanac it contained. Nobody wishes more than I do to see such proofs as you exhibit, that nature has given to your race talents equal to those of the other races of men. I am with great esteem. Sir, Your most obedient servant, Thos. Jefferson. IV Surveyor This strange man, Benjamin Banneker, never went away from home any distance until he was fifty-seven years old. Then he was asked by the commissioners, appointed to run the boundary lines of the District of Columbia, to go with them. He accompanied them. Later, The Evening Star, a Washington daily paper, said, "Major L'Enfant, the engi- benjamin banneker [163 neer, bossed the job while Benjamin Banneker did the work". On Banneker's return home from Washington he told his friends that during that trip he had not touched strong drink, his one temptation, "For", said he, "I feared to trust myself even with wine, lest it should steal away the Uttle sense I had." In those days wines and liquors were upon the tables of the best families. Perhaps no one alive today knows the exact day of Banneker's death. In the fall, probably of 1804, on a beautiful day, he walked out on the hills apparently seeking the sunlight as a tonic. While walking, he met a neighbor to whom he told his condition. He and his neighbor walked along slowly to his house. He lay down at once upon his couch, became speechless and died. During a previous Ulness he had asked that all his papers, almanacs, and the like, be given at his death to Mr. ElUcott, Just two days after his death and while he was being buried, his house burned to the ground. It burned so rapidly that the clock and all his papers were destroyed, A feather bed on which he had slept for many years was removed at his death. The sister to whom he gave it opened it some years later and in it was found a purse of money. 164 ] UNSUNG HEROES Benjamin Banneker was well known on two continents. An article written about him in 1864 by a member of the London Emancipation So ciety says, "Though no monument marks the spot where he was born and Uved a true and high Ufe and was buried, yet history must record that the most original scientific intellect which the South has yet produced was that of the African, Ben jamin Banneker", phillis wheatley Chapter IX PHILLIS WHEATLEY First Poetess of Her Race on American Soil 1753-1784 IN 1753 a baby girl was born on the Western Coast of Africa. Her mother did not sit for hours making beautiful little dresses and doing embroidery for her, for that is not the custom in Africa. Babies do not need many clothes in that warm country. There little children, and grown people too, run around with just a piece of cloth tied about their waists. The chUd was not robust, but she grew and grew untU she soon became her mother's com panion. Her mother, believing that a Great Spirit lives in the sun, went out of her little thatched- roof house every morning and prostrated herself to pour out water before the rising sun. The chUd often watched the water as it streamed down, and sometimes she jumped and clapped her little hands with glee. One bright morning, after this religious cere mony was performed and breakfast was over, the girl ran out to play with the other children. She was shedding her front teeth, but she was not [167] 168 ] UNSUNG HEROES large for her age and she was none too strong. While she and her playmates were having a happy time, suddenly one of the older children ex claimed, "Hoi! hoi!" Every child looked up and took to its heels. There were strange-looking men hurrying towards them. The children ran and screamed. Our little girl stumbled and fell, and the man, pursuing her, grabbed her. She kicked and yelled but he held her fast. Her best friend ran behind a big tree, but she, too, was caught. They both kicked and yelled, but they were taken on board an American vessel. Other chUdren who were caught were also brought to the shore kick ing and crying. When there were almost enough of them for a boat-load, the vessel sailed away. They were on the water for many days. The voyage was long and the sea was rough. The waters lashed the sides of the vessel as it rocked to and fro. Some of the children fell to the floor with spells of vom iting. Many a night everything for a time was in complete darkness and everybody was afraid. The little vessel, however, tugged away for days and nights until it sighted lights flickering in the Bos ton Harbor, All the voyagers, tired and hungry and lonely, re j oiced to be nearing even an unknown land. Soon the boat pulled into the harbor, and PHILLIS WHEATLEY [ 169 although no comforts had been provided for them for the night, weariness of body so overcame lone liness of heart that all of them soon fell asleep. The news had gone abroad in Boston that a shipload of Africans was approaching. The next morning many Bostonians hurried to the harbor to see the Africans. Among the number of spec tators there was a Mrs. John Wheatley, the wife of a taUor. She walked around and looked many of the African girls over from head to foot. Final ly she handed the shipmaster money and took our girl away with her to her home. She and her daughter were busy for a while heating kettles of water, getting out clothing and sewing on a button here and there, preparatory to giving her a good hot bath. When the child was called in she gazed at this strange-looking ob ject which Mrs. Wheatley called a tub. She looked at the soap and felt it. She stretched her eyes as she looked upon the nice white clothes on the chair. She seemed just a little afraid and yet she did as Mrs. Wheatley told her and soon had her bath. After she was dressed, she met another big sur prise. She was taken into a dining-room, where the table was aU spread with white linen. There were strange-looking things to eat. She began 170 ] UNSUNG HEROES eating, but said that the food did not taste like the food in Africa. She picked over this and picked over that, but nothing tasted just right. Never theless she smiled, and it appeared that she was not very hungry. Mrs. Wheatley watched her closely as she came in touch with aU of these strange new things and assured her that in a few days everything would not seem so queer. The girl adopted the customs of the family and they named her Phillis Wheatley. Every day as Mrs. Wheatley's daughter sat reading or writing letters, PhiUis stood looking at her in wonder. Miss Wheatley seemed to write with so much ease that one day PhiUis went out with a piece of charcoal in her hand and began to try to write on the side of a wall. Miss Wheatley, who was seated at a window, watched her for a long time, then called her in and showed her how to make some letters. Phillis busied herself for the remainder of the day making letters and keep ing Miss Wheatley busy showing her how to make new ones. That night she scarcely wished to leave her writing to go to bed, but Miss ^Vheatley per suaded her by promising to give her a lesson every day. They set the lesson hour and Phillis went to bed smiling and shaking with joy. Just at the right time every day she walked into Miss ^Vheat- PHILLIS WHEATLEY [ 171 ley's room for her lesson. When her lessons were over and she was not busy with her work, she was poring over her books. In less than a year and a half she could easily read the most difficult parts of the Bible without making a mistake. In four years people in different parts of the country be gan to hear of her and write to her and even fur nish her with books. To the surprise of the Wheat- leys, she was soon studying and reading the Latin language without any one to help her. At the age of fourteen, Phillis began to write poetry. Often when some great person of whom she knew died, she would write a poem to com memorate his death. Sometimes she awoke dur ing the night and composed verses but could not recall all of them the next morning. As soon as Mrs, Wheatley discovered this, she began leaving a Ught and writing materials on the table at Phil- lis's bedside every night. In cold weather, she always left a fire burning on the hearth in Phillis's room. For six years PhiUis was busy writing poetry and letters and studying and receiving visitors. Many people in England corresponded with her. The educated people of Boston were often seen making their way to the Wheatley home. They talked with PhiUis and questioned her, and often 172 ] UNSUNG HEROES asked her to read some of her poetry. When she in turn went to their homes they took great pride in showing her off as a wonder. Those who talked with her marveled at her knowing so much about English poetry, astronomy, ancient history and the Bible. She continued to write and study. In her nine teenth year she became so thin and pale that the family doctor advised Mrs. Wheatley to give her a sea voyage. Accordingly, the foUowing summer, Phillis set out for London with Mrs. Wheatley's son, who was going there on business. On her arrival in London, after days of travel, some of her friends with whom she had corresponded, met her and welcomed her. As she visited the different ones, she went to dinner parties and theatre par ties given in her honor. When articles about her poetry began to ap pear in many of the leading London papers, her friends advised her to have all of her poems pub lished. She considered the matter and went with some of them to see a pubUsher. After reviewing the poems, the publisher accepted them and pub lished them, in 1773, under the title, "Poems on Various Subjects, ReUgious and Moral, by PhUUs Wheatley". As soon as copies of the poems reached America PHILLIS WHEATLEY [173 and were read, many people expressed doubt about the author being an African girl. The Gov ernor of Massachusetts and seventeen other Bos tonians, upon hearing this report, wrote a letter assuring people everywhere that these poems were written by PhiUis Wheatley. PhiUis Wheatley's London friends were mak ing plans to present her to their king, George III, who was expected in London within a few days, but word reached her that Mrs. Wheatley was quite UI and wished to see her at once. Her pas sage was secured for her while she packed her trunk. As fortune would have it, a vessel was sailing that day for Boston, She bade her friends good-bye and put out to sea. The vessel moved slowly, but after days of travel it landed at Bos ton, She was met at the dock and hurried to the Wheatley home, Mrs. Wheatley caressed her again and again, and lay looking at her for days. For two months PhiUis waited upon Mrs. Wheat- ley and sat by her bedside night after night until she died. Four years later another shock came to the family — Mr. Wheatley died. Seven months after his death his daughter passed away, leaving Phillis alone. PhiUis Uved a short while with a friend of the Wheatleys and then rented a room and lived 174 ] UNSUNG HEROES alone. She lived in this way until she began to taste the bitterness of Revolutionary War times. At that time one goose sold for forty dollars and one-fourth of a lamb sold for fifty dollars. One evening during these hard times she met a handsome man by the name of Peters, who wore a wig and carried a cane. He also kept a grocery store, practiced law and wrote poetry. He began at once to pay court to PhiUis. Later he caUed on her, often took her out for a stroU or to a party until they were married several weeks later. After the wedding day, PhiUis began her daUy round of sweeping and cleaning, cooking and washing and ironing. As the years came and went, three children came into their Uves, Mr, Peters failed in business and then left to PhiUis the sup port of herself and the children. She secured a job in a cheap boarding-house, where she worked every day from early morning until late at night. She became iU from overwork. During the first summer of her iUness two of her children died. The following winter, cold and snowy, some charitable organization placed in her back yard a load of wood. Although the wood lay there, Peters often went out, leaving PhiUis lying on her poor bed without a spark of fire on the hearth. She lay there for weeks. PHILLIS WHEATLEY [ 175 Friends and distant relatives of the WTieatleys often inquired about Phillis, but no one seemed to know where she was. Finally one December afternoon, in 1784, as a grand-niece of Mrs. Wheatley chanced to be walking up Court Street in Boston she met a funeral. Upon inquiry she learned that it was the funeral of Phillis "Wheatley. AN HYMN TO THE MORNING Attend my lays, ye ever-honor'd nine; Assist my labours, and my strain refine; In smoothest numbers pour the notes along. For bright aurora now demands my song, Aurora hail, and all the thousand dyes. Which deck thy progress through the vaulted skies: The morn awakes, and wide extends her rays. On ev'ry leaf the gentle zephyr plays ; Harmonious lays the feather'd race resume. Part the bright eye, and shake the painted plume. Ye shady groves, your verdant gloom display To shield your poet from the burning day; Calliope awake the sacred lyre. While thy fair sisters fan the pleasing fire: The bow'rs, the gales, the variegated skies In all their pleasures in my bosom rise. See in the East th' illustrious king of day ! His rising radiance drives the shades away. But oh ! I feel his fervid beams too strong. And scarce begun, concludes th' abortive song. — From Poems on Various Subjects, Religious and Moral. 176 ] UNSUNG HEROES AN HYMN TO THE EVENING Soon as the sun forsook the eastern main The pealing thunder shook the heav'nly plain; Majestic grandeur ! From the zephyr's wing. Exhales the incense of the blooming spring. Soft purl the streams, the birds renew their notes. And through the air their mingled music floats. Through all the heav'ns what beauteous dyes are spread ! But the west glories in the deepest red: So may our breasts with ev'ry virtue glow. The living temples of our God below ! FiU'd with the praise of him who gives the light. And draws the sable curtains of the night. Let placid slumbers sooth each weary mind. At morn to wake more heav'nly, more refin'd; So shall the labours of the day begin More pure, more guarded from the snares of sin. Night's leaden sceptre seals my drowsy eyes. Then cease, my song, till fair Aurora rise. Imagination! Who can sing thy force? Or who describe the swiftness of thy course? Soaring through air to find the bright abode, Th' empyreal palace of the thund'ring God, We on thy pinions can surpass the wind. And leave the rolling universe behind: From star to star the mental optics rove, Measure the skies, and range the realms above. There in one view we grasp the mighty whole. Or with new worlds amaze th' unbounded soul. — Taken from "Imagination" PHILLIS WHEATLEY [177 Improve your privileges whUe they stay. Ye pupUs, and each hour redeem, that bears Or good or bad report of you to heav'n; Let sin, that baneful evU to the soul. By you be shunn'd, nor once remit your guard; Suppress the deadly serpent in its egg. Ye blooming plants of human race divine. An Ethiop teUs you 'tis your greatest foe; Its transient sweetness turns to endless pain. And in immense perdition sinks the soul. — Taken from "To the University of Camhridge, in New England" TOUSSAINT L OUVERTURE MY CHILDREN, CHOOSE YOUR DUTY.' Chapter X TOUSSAINT L'OUVERTURE Commander-in-Chief or an Ahmy President of Hayti 1743-1803 MANY years ago a keen-faced little boy with protruding lips, Toussaint by name, was busy, day by day, tending a great herd of cattle on the Island of Hayti in the West Indies. He started out early every morning, cracking his whip as loudly as he could and getting his cows in line. Often he ran upon one, gave her a cut and called out, "Gee, there, SaUy; ha, ha, get in line there, Buck! Come on now! Get up, I say!" That great herd of cattle marched out at his bidding and began to graze in the deep valleys or on the high mountains. Even the most unruly ones ate around and around in the high grass. All of them ate and ate, and many lay down about noon and chewed their cuds, Toussaint kept his eye on them and at the same time busied himself with other things. One day he climbed an orange tree, sat in the fork of it and ate oranges until his stomach looked like a little stuffed pouch. Another day he sat [181] 182 ] UNSUNG HEROES lazily under a banana tree, reached up and puUed bananas and ate and ate, and pulled more and ate until he almost fell asleep. StUl another day, he hammered away on a hard coconut shell trying to burst it with his fist. Later, he joined the na tives for a few minutes as they washed gold from the sands of a stream of water. While many of the cows were resting from the heat one day, Toussaint ran across to the two great hills of pure salt, "Oh, isn't that beautiful", he said in French, "And do we really eat that salt in our food? And is one of those salt hUls two miles long? Well, there must be enough salt there to salt down everything and everybody on the island. I guess we'll be salting down the trees next", he added. The next day at noon he ran away to the blue copper mines and the sulphur mines and gathered a handful of flowers along the way. As the time passed, he settled down to get out his reading, arithmetic, geometry and Latin. Toussaint's teacher, who was an older slave, had in some way learned quite a little of these subjects and was teaching him secretly at night. Years passed, and Toussaint continued to tend the cattle as though nothing terrible would ever happen to him. Cattle-tending days finaUy ceased. TOUSSAINT l'oUVERTURE [183 and he was promoted to the position of coachman and horse doctor. Some of the boys eyed him jealously as his carriage dashed by them. They said, "Eh, Mr, Horse Doctor! Drenching old horses, ha, ha!" Toussaint reared back and held the lines tightly with his arms outstretched. With his horses aU sleek and his carriage polished Uke a looking- glass, he sat back like the grandson of an African king, as he was, and drove with a steady hand. Apparently happy now in his new position, he married an African young woman whose parents, like his own, had been brought from Africa to Hayti many years before. Many other Africans had been brought over as slaves to this island to work the land because the natives of Hayti had died out. There were also on the island French men, Spaniards and free Negroes. Trouble arose among these people and war broke out. For days fires raged, houses were burned and thousands of people fell dead and mortaUy wounded by bullets. Toussaint looked on, but took no part in the war at first. When his master's home was about to be burned to the ground he broke into it, rescued very valuable articles for his master, and helped his master's f amUy to escape from the island. Then he became 184 ] UNSUNG HEROES a free man, joined the army of slaves and soon rose to the rank of colonel. His army joined with the Spaniards, but when the French gave freedom to all the slaves, his army joined the French and drove the Spaniards from the island. Before the close of the war, the French made Toussaint brigadier-general. As brigadier-gen eral he made charts of the island and studied them so closely that he knew the com-se of every stream and the location of every hUl. He fought the Spanish so hard that one after another of their towns fell into the hands of the French. One day a French soldier exclaimed, "Cet homme fait ouverture partout" (this man makes an opening everywhere) . This saying was passed along by the soldiers, and ever after this Toussaint was called "Toussaint L'Ouverture" (Toussaint, the opening). 'Tis true he had been in battles and made openings, but nothing terrible had happened to him yet. For a long time the French general seemed to have very little confidence in Toussaint, but once this general was thrown into prison on the island, Toussaint marched at the head of an army of 10,000 men, had him released and restored him to his office. For this act Toussaint was ap pointed lieutenant-governor of the island. Later TOUSSAINT L^OUVERTURE [185 on he became commander-in-chief of the French army in Santo Domingo. This was the most im portant position on the island where Toussaint had been a slave for nearly fifty years. Every where people gladly co-operated with him in his administration. Now that things were going weU, he sent his two sons to Paris to be educated. The French rulers publicly praised him and called him the de liverer of Santo Domingo. The French Govern ment presented him with a richly embroidered dress and a suit of superb armor. FinaUy Toussaint became president of Hayti for life. It is said that his generals were as obe dient to him as children. His soldiers looked upon him as a wonder, and the people generally wor shipped him as their deliverer, English officers who fought against him said that he never broke his word. He was plain in his dress and in all his manners. His dinner often consisted of cakes, fruit and a glass of water. He often jumped on his horse and rode one hundred and fifty miles without rest. Then he would rest for two hours and start out again. During the last two years of Toussaint's life, a terrible thing happened to him. Napoleon Bona- 186 ] UNSUNG HEROES parte, the ruler of France, because of jealousy, it is said, sent against Toussaint twenty-six war ships and a number of transports. On board these vessels there were twenty-five thousand French soldiers. When Toussaint looked out upon the ocean and caught a glimpse of this great fleet, he said in his native tongue, "All France is coming to Santo Domingo". The soldiers landed and be gan to slaughter the natives. Toussaint's two sons, whom he had not seen for several years, were on one of the ships. When they saw their father they ran to meet him. Toussaint could not speak, but he and his sons threw them selves into each other's arms and wept bitterly. The French general, it is said, saw that he could not use these boys to play a trick on their father and thus make him yield to the French. He then said that the boys must be taken back to France. Toussaint stood before his sons with folded arms, saying in the French language, "My children, choose your duty; whatever it be, I shaU always love and bless you". One of the boys said, "I am done with France. I shall fight by your side. Father." The other boy left his father and returned to France. The cruel war continued. Toussaint and his generals with a small body of troops fortified themselves in a TOUSSAINT l'oUVERTURE [187 mountainous retreat. The French soldiers tried hard for a long time to dislodge them but they could not. FinaUy Toussaint sent two of his pris oners with a letter to the French General saying that he would make peace. A few days later, when Toussaint came forth to greet the French general, guns were fired in Tous saint's honor and all heads were bowed as he passed by. Three hundred horsemen with their sabres drawn foUowed Toussaint to protect him. He and the French General agreed on a plan, but Napoleon Bonaparte declared that Toussaint must be sent as a prisoner to France. It was difficult to take him as a prisoner and so a trick was played on him. At the giving of a signal, French soldiers sprang upon his guards and disarmed them. Then they bade Toussaint give up his sword. He yielded it in sUence and was taken to his own home. A band of French soldiers came during the night and forced him and his wife to go aboard a French vessel. On their way to France Toussaint's cabin door was guarded by soldiers. His wrists were chained together. He was not even permitted to talk with his wife. When his vessel landed at Brest, France, a detachment of soldiers took him to Paris and placed him in prison. Winter soon came on and 188 ] UNSUNG HEROES he was taken to an old castle away up in the Jura Mountains. In this old castle there was a cold, wet dungeon partly under ground. He was plunged into this and there he remained for ten months, neglected, humUiated and starved. On the 27th of AprU, 1803, he was found dead in his dungeon. Toussaint, the most unhappy man of men! Whether the whistling rustic tend his plough Within thy hearing, or thou Uest now Buried in some deep dungeon's earless den, O miserable chieftain! where and when WUt thou find patience? Yet die not; do thou Wear rather in thy bonds a cheerful brow; Though faUen thyself, never to rise again. Live and take comfort. Thou hast left behind Powers that wiU work for thee — air, earth and skies; There's not a breathing of the common wind That will forget thee — thou hast great allies; Thy friends are exultations, agonies. And love, and man's unconquerable mind. — William Wordsworth. JOSIAH HENSON Chapter XI JOSIAH HENSON The Faithful Servant 1789-1881 JOSIAH HENSON, or "Si" as he was caUed, tried at the age of fifteen to out-hoe, out-reap, out-husk, out-dance every other boy on his mas ter's plantation in Charles County, Maryland. Boys would sometimes stand around and look at "Si" and talk about the wonderful things he could do and the great stories they had heard about him. One special story they liked to teU. The story was this: As a child "Si" was such a sickly Uttle feUow his master offered to seU him cheaply to the man who owned his mother. His mother's master hesitated to buy him, saying, "I am afraid the Uttle devU might die. I do not wish to buy a dead brat". Nevertheless, he finaUy agreed to shoe some horses for Si's master and thus pay a smaU sum for Si. OccasionaUy after some boy was through tell ing this stock tale, which always produced a laugh, other boys would begin to guess why Si was so great. One said one day, "I guess it's that meat [191] 192 ] UNSUNG HEROES Si eats at Christmas time. He certainly doesn't get much at any other time". "No", said another, who slept in the cabin with Si, "Si sleeps more soundly than any one of us in the cabin, and there are twelve of us who sleep in that one room, counting the women and girls. Give me a board and let me show you how Si stretches out on his plank. Now give me some straw to go under my head. How I wish there were a big fire on a hearth to toast my feet before, like Si does as he sleeps!" "Ha, ha, ha!" laughed the boys as the young fellow stretched out on the board like Si, A third boy then said, "Well, Si was named for two great men — ^his master. Dr. Josiah, and Dr, Josiah's uncle, Mr. Henson, who was an army officer". Other boys gave stiU other reasons for Si's greatness. However, the one thing upon which all were agreed was that Si could out-hoe, out-reap, out-husk, out-dance, out-everything every other boy on his master's plantation in Charles Coimty, Maryland, Si seemed to grow steadily in favor with his master and the older slaves as well as with the boys. One day he went to his master and reported that the overseer was stealing things at a certain time every day. His master sent him out to watch JOSIAH HENSON [193 for the overseer. Just as the overseer came around for his booty, Si ran for his master. His master ran out and caught the overseer in the act of stealing and dismissed him at once. Josiah, as his master called him, was then pro moted to the position of superintendent of the farm, but without pay. He led the slaves. He hoed and plowed early and late. Men and women worked harder and far more cheerfully than usual. The crops were nearly doubled. Josiah often rose from his plank at midnight, hitched the mules to a loaded wagon and drove through mud and rain to the Georgetown or the Washington, D. C, market to sell the produce. One day as he was selling at McKenny's bakery in Georgetown, he asked Mr, McKenny about a sermon which he had recently heard Mr, Mc Kenny preach. After teUing Mr, McKenny that that was the first sermon he had ever heard, he asked how men learned to preach, Mr. McKenny told him a little about God and the Bible. He went further, saying, "My young man, you must be about nineteen or twenty years old now. You have a good mind. You must learn to preach to your people". This thought seemed to linger with Josiah as he made his way back home that evening hungry and tired. 194 ] UNSUNG HEROES His master, he learned, had been away at the tavern nearly all day. He ate his supper, caUed for his master's saddle horse, which he led to the tavern. As his master's body-servant, he aUghted and went in. Just as he reached the door he saw his master cornered and a dozen men striking at him with their fists, chairs, crockery and whatever was at hand. The moment Josiah's master saw him he shouted, "That's it, Josiah! Pitch in! Show me fair play!" Josiah pitched in. He knocked down and shoved and tripped up the fighters, sustaining many bruises on his own head and shoulders. FinaUy he was able to drag his master out and pack him into a wagon like a bag of com and drive home. In the scuffle the overseer of Josiah's master's brother got a faU which he attributed to Josiah's roughness. One week later Josiah's master sent him to a place a few miles away to mail some letters. He took a short cut through a lane which was bounded on either side by a high rail fence and shut in at each end by a large gate. As he passed through the line, he saw the overseer who had fallen that night and three slaves in an adjoining field. On his return, the overseer was seated on the fence. Just as Josiah approached, the overseer jumped JOSIAH HENSON [195 from the fence. Two of the slaves sprang from the bushes in front of Josiah and the other slave leaped over the fence behind him. After listening to several commands to Ught at once, Josiah slipped off his horse. Orders were given him to remove his shirt, but he shook his head. Just then the men struck at hun so violently that his horse broke away and ran home, Josiah, in warding off the blow, got into a corner. The overseer ordered the slaves to seize him, but they, knowing Josiah's reputation, hesitated to run upon him. The two slaves that finally ventured upon Josiah were so completely knocked out that the overseer began to fight Uke a madman. As he struck at Josiah with a piece of fence rail, Josiah lifted his arms to ward off the blow. The bones in Josiah's arms and shoulders cracked like pipe-stems, and he fell headlong to the ground. When Josiah finaUy made his way home, his master, already anxious because of the return of the riderless horse, examined him and went in search of the overseer, whom he gave a severe flogging. With the belief so well fixed that a slave would get well anyhow, no medical aid was provided for Josiah except what came at the hands of his mas ter's sister. Miss Patty. Miss Patty flinched at 196 ] UNSUNG HEROES no responsibility, from wrenching out teeth to setting bones. She splinted Josiah's arms and bound up his back as weU as she could. Five months later, Josiah began to plow, to take up his duties as superintendent, and to make his usual trips to the markets. In about a year, al though he was never able after that eventful day to raise his hands to his head, he married a rather efficient, pious girl who, as the years roUed on, bore him twelve children, Josiah kept the slaves cheerful and busy. He furnished his master with abundance of money, which his master used freely on an eighteen-year- old girl whom he soon married. The young mistress, in her attempt to save everything, failed to provide her younger brother, then living with her, with enough to eat. The boy went to Josiah with tears in his eyes and asked for food, Josiah shared his own provisions with him. However, in spite of the young mistress's frugal ity, her husband's good times involved him in debt and in lawsuits with his brother-in-law and others, and finally in ruin. He went to Josiah's cabin one cold night in January. As he sat by the fire warming himself, he began to groan and wring his hands. "Sick, master?" said Josiah, He kept on groan- JOSIAH HENSON [ 197 ing. "Can't I help you any way, master?" con tinued Josiah, Finally puUing himself together, he said, "Oh, Josiah! I'm ruined, ruined, ruined!" "How, master?" asked Josiah in excitement. The master replied, "The courts have ruled against me, and in less than two weeks every slave I have wUl be put up and sold. There is only one way I can save anything. You can help me. Won't you, Josiah?" "Yes", repUed Josiah. His master then said, "I want you to run away, Josiah, to my brother in Kentucky, and take all of my slaves with you". Josiah hesitated, saying that he did not know how to get to Kentucky. His master prevailed upon him until he promised to leave the following night for Kentucky. The next morning Josiah set about making preparations for his journey. When evening came on he counted aU of the slaves — eighteen in number, besides himself, his two children and his wife. He loaded a one-horse wagon with oats, meal, bacon and children, and set out about eleven o'clock for Kentucky, nearly a thousand miles away. The men trudged all the way in the cold. Occasionally the women rested by getting a ride on the wagon. After about two months and a half 198 ] UNSUNG HEROES of wonderful experiences on the road, Josiah and the other slaves reached Davis County, Kentucky. In that county Josiah's master's brother owned a large plantation and about one hundred slaves, Josiah became superintendent of that plantation after several months' stay there. He made him self about as content as he could under the cir cumstances. He occasionally attended preach ing services and camp meetings. At the end of his three years' stay in Kentucky, a Quarterly Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church admitted him as a minister. About this time Josiah's master sent an agent to Kentucky to seU all his slaves except Josiah and his famUy, who were to return to Maryland. Directed by a Methodist minister, Josiah preached his way back through Ohio to Maryland, arriving with two hundred and seventy-five dol lars, a horse and his first suit of clothes. His mas ter greeted him, commented upon his fine clothes and sent him out to feed his horse. Josiah put his horse in the stable and went to the kitchen, where he was to sleep. He could not sleep for planning how to get his master to accept money for his free dom. His master was not easily persuaded. Nev ertheless, he accepted three hundred and fifty dollars in cash as part payment for Josiah's JOSIAH HENSON [ 199 freedom. Josiah set out again for Kentucky. Days passed before he was again back in his Ken tucky cabin with his family. He became angry as soon as he heard how much more he had to pay before he could be free, and yet he went about his work as usual. A year passed. One day Josiah's master told him that his son Amos was going to New Orleans with a flat-boat load of beef cattle, pigs, poultry, corn and whiskey. He said further that Josiah was to go with his son. Josiah's countenance fell. He said he feared he would never return. When he was ready to go, his wife and children walked to the landing with him, where he bade them good-bye. Yoimg master Amos, Josiah and three other men were the only persons on the boat. Each one except Josiah took his turn at the helm, usual ly under the direction of the captain, Josiah took three turns to each of the other men's one. He managed the boat so well that when the captain was struck totally bUnd on the trip, all depended upon him for reaching New Orleans in safety. However, he did not know the river well enough to travel by night; therefore the boat had to lay by when night came on. One dark, stormy night, when they were within 200 ] UNSUNG HEROES a few days' sail of New Orleans, Josiah sat knit ting his brow and beating his breast in apparently hopeless despair. Suddenly he rose, saying, "I will kill the four men on the boat, take aU the money, scuttle the boat and escape to the North". He walked alone on deck, while the other men were all asleep. Finally he went down, got an ax, and entered his young master's cabin where he lay fast asleep, Josiah raised the ax and was about to strike, but hesitated, saying, "What, commit murder, and I a Christian?" His arm dropped, the ax fell to the floor. Then he said to himself, "Ah, I am glad the thought took hold of me, EvU deeds cannot be hidden. 'Murder wiU out.' I must not lose all the fruits of my effort at im proving myself. I must not lose my character". He shrank back and fell upon his knees. Soon after they arrived in New Orleans, the cargo was all sold and the men were discharged. Josiah was to be sold the next day and Master Amos was to take passage back on a steamboat at six o'clock that evening. Josiah could not sleep that night. Just a short while before daylight. Master Amos called him, saying, "My stomach is out of order". Josiah arose and went to him. His illness was so violent that Josiah saw at once that he had the river fever. JOSIAH HENSON [ 201 By eight o'clock that morning he was helpless. He begged Josiah to stick to him untU he reached home again. Josiah sold the flat-boat, placed his young master and the trunk containing the money for the cargo on the steamer and was off for Ken tucky by twelve o'clock that day. As he sat by his master, bathing his fevered head, he could not help feeling that God had opened the way for his return to his family in Kentucky. During the days that Josiah was preaching his way through Ohio, he had heard much about fugi tive slaves. He had also met several men who were engaged in assisting fugitives to escape. AU of this now came back to him very vividly. He thought and thought, and then spoke to his wife about running away to the North, Struck with fear, she attempted to show him the dangers in their way. After pleading with her for several days, he told her one night that he was going to take the chUdren and go. She, too, then agreed to go. Josiah wondered now how he could carry his younger chUdren — one of whom was three years and the other only two. He placed them in a tow-sack which his wife had made, Ufted it gen tly across his shoulder and practiced carrying them on his back. This he did for several nights. Finally the evening in September agreed upon 202 ] UNSUTSTG HEROES for their start came around. Everything was ready for the venture with one exception — Josiah had not obtained his master's permission to let Uttle Tom, the eldest child, come home to see his mother. About sundown, he went up to the great house to report his work. After talking with his master for a time he started off as usual. Suddenly he turned carelessly back, saying, "Oh, Master Amos, I almost forgot. Tom's mother wishes to know if you wiU let him come down a few days ; she would like to mend his clothes and fix him up a Uttle". "Yes, boy, yes, he can go", said Master Amos, "Thank you. Master Amos, good night", said Josiah, "Good night, Josiah", said he, "The Lord bless you. Master Amos", added Josiah, as he and Tom struck a trot for home. Everybody at home was ready to start. The babies were even sitting in the sack. Soon they were aU at the ferry. About nine o'clock on that moonless night, Josiah and his family were set across the river in a Uttle skiff rowed by a fellow slave. They walked and walked until they were within two days of reaching Cincinnati, when their food gave out and they were nearly exhausted. Josiah ven tured out to beg something for his chUdren to eat. Finally a good woman fiUed a plate with salty joslah henson [ 203 venison and bread and gave it to him, saying, "God bless you". The chUdren ate and then cried for water. Josiah went in search of water and found a Uttle. Seeing that his old hat leaked too badly to hold water, he puUed off both his shoes, rinsed them out and fiUed them with water, which he took to his thirsty chUdren, who drank and drank untU both shoes were drained. Refreshed with food and water, they arose and continued their journey. After several weeks' travel they reached Sandusky, Ohio, where they secured passage to Buffalo, New York, with a Scotch captain. The Scotch captain, on reaching the end of his trip, paid their passage money on the ferry-boat across to Canada and gave Josiah one doUar besides. On the twenty-eighth of Oc tober, 1830, they arrived in Canada. Josiah Henson began to work for a man with whom he remained three years. This man gave Tom, Henson's twelve-year-old son, two quarters' schooling. Tom soon learned to read weU, and he read a great deal to his father from the Bible on Sunday mornings when his father was to preach. One Sunday morning Henson asked Tom to read. Tom turned to the One-hundred-and- third Psalm and read: "Bless the Lord, O my 204 ] UNSUNG HEROES soul: and all that is within me, bless His holy name". When he had finished, he turned to his father and said, "Father, who was David? He writes prettily, doesn't he?" And then Tom asked again, "Father, who was David?" Henson said he was utterly unable to answer Tom's question, for he had never before heard of David, but he tried to conceal his embarrassment by saying, "David was a man of God, my son". "I suppose so", said Tom, "but I want to know something more about him. Where did he live? What did he do?" Finally Henson said frankly, "I do not know, Tom". Tom exclaimed, "Why, Father, can't you read ?" "I cannot", said Henson, "Why not?" said Tom. "Because I never had an opportunity to learn, nor anybody to teach me", replied Henson, "Well, you can learn now, Father", said Tom. "No, my son", answered Henson, "I am too old and have not time enough, I must work all day or you would not have enough to eat." Tom said, "Then you might do it at night", Henson thought a moment afid, looking at his bright-eyed boy, said, "But stUl there's no- JOSLAH HENSON [ 205 body to teach me. I can't afford to pay anybody for it, and of course, no one can do it for nothing". Tom approached his father, saying, "Why Father, I'U teach you; and then you'U know so much more you can talk better and preach better". After wrestUng with the matter a short time, Henson agreed that Tom was right. They began and continued through the winter to study to gether every evening by the Ught of a pine-knot or some hickory bark, untU the coming of spring, when Henson had learned to read a little. Now, at the age of fifty years, he was having some very new experiences. In Une with his thought of estabUshing a school to help his people, he went to a Boston friend for aid, who in turn went to England and raised $15,000 for the school. With this money two hundred acres of land were bought at Dawn, Canada, on which, covered as it was with black walnut timber, a schoolhouse was buUt and opened to the public. Later a saw- miU was built on this tract of land and set to running. The school and the sawmiU prospered for a whUe, but soon both were in need of funds, Henson had four black walnut boards so highly poUshed that they shone Uke mirrors. These he took to London, England, and exhibited at the World's Industrial Exhibition. For this exhibit 206 ] UNSUNG HEROES he was awarded a bronze medal and a life-size picture of the Queen and royal famUy. This was neither Henson's first nor his last trip to that country. After some years of trouble and sorrow and loss, he returned to England, just after the news had gone abroad that he was the original "Uncle Tom" of Harriet Beecher Stowe's "Uncle Tom's Cabin". This time many honors were heaped upon him. He even visited Windsor Castle and was presented to Queen Vic toria, who presented him with a photograh of her self on an easel frame of gold. On his return to the United States in 1878, he was received at the White House in Washington, D. C, by President Hayes, Before returning to Canada to spend the last three years of his Ufe, he visited the old home place in Charles County, Maryland, where his former mistress, for whom he had worked fifty years before, and who was now poor and decrepit, wept for joy at the sight of him. SOJOURNER TRUTH Chapter XII SOJOURNER TRUTH The Suffragist 1800-1883 AMONG IsabeUa's earliest recollections was La picture of her father and mother sitting night after night in their damp cellar, lighted by a blazing pine-knot, talking over their experiences of bygone days. Occasionally they would refer to one snowy morning when an old-fashioned sleigh drove up to their door and took away their un suspecting little boy, Michael, and their little girl, Nancy, locked in the sleigh-box. Whenever this story was mentioned, Isabella seemed to faU into a deep study. However, she was left to remain in Ulster County, New York, her birthplace, until her mother and father died. She was then sold to a man whose wife scolded and frowned at her creeping gait, her dull under standing and slovenly ways. In spite of his wife's impatience, the man insisted that Isabella could do as much work as half a dozen common people and do it well, Isabella, therefore, fond of trying to please her [209] 210 ] UNSUNG HEROES new master, often worked several nights in suc cession, taking only short naps as she sat in her chair. Some nights, fearing that if she sat down she would sleep too long, she took only cat-naps while she rested against the kitchen waU. One morning the potatoes which IsabeUa had cooked for breakfast seemed unusually dingy and dirty. "Look!" said IsabeUa's mistress to her husband, "a fine specimen of BeU's work! It is the way all her work is done!" Isabella's mas ter scolded her and bade her be more careful in the future. The two white servant-girls in the family also abused Isabella for preparing such food. Isabella moped around apparently wondering why the potatoes looked so dingy and dirty. As she stood wondering how to avoid this the next time, Gertrude, her mistress's Uttle daughter, stole quietly up behind her. Said she, catching Isabella by the arm, "Bell, if you wiU wake me early tomorrow morning, I wiU get up and attend to your potatoes while you go out to milk the cows. Then Father and Mother and aU of them wiU not be scolding you", Isabella bowed, thanked her and promised to wake her early; then off Ger trude ran. The next morning, just as the potatoes began SOJOURNER TRUTH [211 to boil and milking time came, little Gertrude walked into the kitchen and seated herself in the corner by the fire. She opened her little sewing basket and busied herself with making something for her doll. As she sat there, one of the maids came in with the broom in her hand and ordered her out, but Gertrude refused to go. The maid began to sweep hurriedly. When she reached the fireplace, she pretended to be in such a hurry, she caught up a handful of ashes and quickly dashed them into the potatoes. Gertrude ran out of the kitchen, saying, "Oh, Poppee! oh, Poppee! the girl has been putting ashes into BeU's potatoes ! I saw her do it! Look at those that fell on the outside of the kettle!" She ran about the house and yard teUing her story to every one. Her father listened to her story, caUed the maid in and, brandishing his fist at her, gave her orders to let Bell alone. For many years, Isabella tried harder each year to please her master. Even after she had married and become the mother of five children, she obeyed him to such an extent that she would not steal even a crust of bread for her hungry children. When her household duties were done, she went to the field to work. After placing her baby child in a basket, she tied a rope to each handle and suspended the basket to the branches of a tree. 212 ] UNSUNG HEROES She then set one of the larger children to swing the basket "in order to make the baby happy and keep the snakes away", she said. Isabella's master promised that if she would continue to be faithful he would set her free one year before all the slaves in New York State were to be free. As the time drew near, her master claimed that because of her sore hand that year, she had been of less value and would therefore have to remain longer. However, IsabeUa decided to remain only until she had spun aU his wool. One fine morning, a little before daybreak, she stepped away from the rear of her master's house with her baby boy on one arm and her clothes and provisions tied in a cotton handkerchief on the other. Fortunately, she landed in the home of a man who made no practice of buying and selling people. Nevertheless, he gave IsabeUa's master, who came in search of her, twenty-five doUars for her freedom. Just before Isabella left her master, he had sold her five-year-old boy to a man who was on his way to England. The man, finding the boy too small for his services, sent him back to. his brother, who in turn sold the boy to his brother-in- law in another state. When IsabeUa heard that her boy had been sold and sent away, she started SOJOURNER TRUTH [ 213 out to find the guilty party and, if possible, to make him return her boy. She went to her former mistress and others con cerned in the sale, saying, "I'U have my child again". FinaUy she went to her former master, who told her to go to the Quakers and they would assist her. Straightway she went to the home of a Quaker family. They welcomed her and placed her in a room where there was a high, clean, white bed. In all of her twenty-seven years she had never slept in a bed. She sat for a long time look ing at the bed and getting ready to crawl under it. However, she finally crawled gently up into the bed and soon feU asleep. The next morning, her Quaker friends took her nearly to town and gave her directions for reaching the court-house, where she made complaint to the grand jury. On reaching the court-house, she entered. Thinking that the first fine-looking man she saw was the grand jury, she began to complain to him about her boy. He listened for a few moments and then told her that there was no grand jury there ; she must go upstairs. When she had made her way upstairs through the crowd, she again went to the grandest-looking man she saw. Im mediately she began to tell him that she came to make her complaint to the grand jury. Greatly 214 ] UNSUNG HEROES amused, he asked what her complaint was. As soon as she began in her impressive way to tell her story, he said, pointing to a certain door, "This is no place to enter a complaint — ^go in there". She went in, and finding the grand jurors sit ting, began to tell her story. One of the jurors asked if she could swear that was her boy. "Yes", she answered, "I swear it's my son." "Stop, stop!" said the lawyer, "you must swear by this Bible," Taking the Bible, she placed it to her lips and began to swear it was her child. The clerks in the office burst into an uproar of laugh ter. None of this seemed to disturb IsabeUa. After understanding that she was simply to make a pledge of her truthfulness with her hand upon the Bible, she did so and hurried away. With a piece of paper, called a writ, in her hand for the arrest of the man who had sent her boy away, she trotted to the constable eight miles off. Al though the constable by mistake served the writ on the wrong brother, it had its effect. The brother who had sold the boy went in hiding until he could slip away to get the boy. The distance was great and travel in those days was slow. Autumn days came and went and then winter, and finaUy spring came before the man arrived with the boy. During all these months SOJOURNER TRUTH [ 215 Isabella kept going about seeing this friend and that one, until she said she was afraid that she had worried all of her friends, even God himself, nearly to death. The news finally reached her that her boy had come, but that he denied having any mother. When she reached the place where her boy Peter was, he cried aloud against this taU, dark, bony woman with a white turban on her head. He knelt down and begged with tears not to be taken from his kind master. When some one asked him about the bad scar on his forehead, he said, "Master's horse hove me there". And then some one else asked about the scar on his cheek. He said, "That was done by running against Master's carriage". As he answered both of these questions, he looked wistfully at his master, as much as to say, "If they are falsehoods, you bade me say them; may they be satisfactory to you, at least". Kind words and candies at last quieted Peter and he said, looking at his mother, "Well, you do look like my mother used to look". They embraced each other and went their way. After Isabella and Peter had been free one year they went to New York City to live. Peter was growing taU and rather nice-look ing, in spite of his hard life. He often attracted 216 ] UNSUNG HEROES attention by his winsome way; but tempted by the gay life of New York City, he was soon drawn into a circle of boys whose sole object was to have a good time. He began to con ceal from his mother those things of which he thought she would not approve. For example, for two years he was known among his worthless companions as Peter WiUiams, without his moth er's knowledge of his new name. However, a friend of IsabeUa's, much pleased with Peter's appearance and bright mind, said that Peter should have an education if any one else should. Believing this, she paid ten doUars as tuition for him to enter a navigation school. Instead of at tending school, Peter went irregularly, making some reasonable excuse each time to his teacher for not being able to attend school that day, IsabeUa and her friend, believing that Peter was doing well in school, secured for him a part-time job as coachman, Peter soon sold the livery and other things belonging to his employer. He became involved in one difficulty after an other, but each time IsabeUa managed to get him out. Each time she tried to reason with Peter. He would always confess, saying that he never intended to do wrong, but had been led along little by little until before he knew it, he was in serious SOJOURNER TRUTH [ 217 trouble. At last, seeing no improvement in her son, IsabeUa made up her mind to let him go un assisted in his difficulties. FinaUy, he feU into the hands of the poUce, who sent for Mr. Peter WUUams, a barber. Mr. WUUams's interest was so aroused by the boy's having his name, that he paid the fine on Peter's promise to leave New York City on a vessel saUing within a week. Mr. WUliams seemed surprised to find that the boy had such a mother as Isabella. Isabella said that she was afraid lest her son would deceive Mr. WUUams and be missing when the vessel saUed, However, Peter saUed ; though for over a month IsabeUa lived in fear of seeing him emerge from some by-street in New York City. More than a year had passed when IsabeUa received the foUowing letter : My dear and beloved Mother: I take this opportunity to write to you and inform you that I am weU, and in hopes of finding you the same. I got on board the same unlucky ship "Done of Nantucket". I am sorry to say that I have been punished once severely by shoving my head in the fire for other folks. We have had bad luck, but in hopes of having better. We have about 230 on board, but in hopes, if we do have good luck, that my parents wiU receive me with thanks. I would like to know how my sisters are. Do my cousins live in New York yet? Have you received my letter? If not, inquire of Mr. Peirce Whitings. I wish you would write me an answer as soon as possible. I am your only 218 ] UNSUNG HEROES son, that is so far from home, in the wide, briny ocean. I have seen more of the world than I ever expected, and if I ever return home safe, I wiU teU you aU my troubles and hardships. Mother, I hope you do not forget me, your dear and only son. I should like to know how Sophia and Betsy and Hannah are. I hope you all wUl forgive me for aU that I have done. Your son, Peter Van Wagner. Isabella's last annual letter from Peter said that if he did not do well, she need not expect him home in five years. During the five years of ex pectant waiting, Isabella joined Zion's Church, in Church Street, New York City, where she wor shiped for some time. One Sunday morning, after services, a tall, weU-dressed woman came up and made herself known to Isabella as her sister Sophia who had just moved to New York City. She also brought to meet Isabella her brother Michael, whom Isabella had never seen. The brother Michael told IsabeUa that her sister Nancy, who had been for many years a member of Zion Church, had just passed away. As he de scribed his sister Nancy's features, her manner, her dress, and named her class leader, IsabeUa stood shaking as though she would fall to the floor. She caught hold of the back of a bench, ex claiming, "I knelt at the altar with her. I took the Lord's Supper with her, I shook hands with SOJOURNER TRUTH [ 219 her! Was that my sister who was taken away one snowy morning in the sleigh? Are you my brother Michael who was taken away in the sleigh- box?" The three of them stood there mingling their tears each with the other. While IsabeUa was a member of Zion Church she often visited the pavement meetings of a band of reUgious fanatics. These fanatics were in the habit of fasting every Friday and sometimes as long as two nights and three days, refusing even a cup of cold water. Isabella asked one of the leaders why he fasted. He said that fasting gave him great light on the things of God. "WeU", said Isabella, "if fasting will give light inwardly and spiritually, I need it as much as anybody, and I'U fast too". She further said, "If such a good man as that needs to fast two nights and three days, then I certainly ought to fast more. I will fast three nights and thi-ee days". She fasted three nights and three days, not drinking even so much as a drop of water. The fourth morning when she arose and tried to stand, she fell to the floor. Feeling very empty and light, she crawled to the pantry, but fearing, as she says, that she might now offend God by eating too much, she compelled herself to eat dry bread and drink water. Before she felt strong enough to 220 ] UNSUNG HEROES walk she had eaten a six-penny loaf of bread. She says that she did get light, but it was aU in her body and none in her mind. During Isabella's first years in New York City, she was always trying to place a little money from time to time in the savings bank for the rainy day. Influenced by her fanatic friends, she drew her money from the savings bank and placed it in their common treasury, or kingdom, as they called it, not even asking about "interest or taking account of what she had put in. In later years Isabella often said in her witty way, "The only thing I recovered from the wreck of that common kingdom was a few pieces of old furniture". With aU of her savings gone, she started anew, working early and late, to lay aside enough to buy a home for herself in her advanced age. If the people in the home where she worked gave her fifty cents to hire a poor man to clean away the snow, she arose early, performed the task herself and pocketed the money. She began to feel that she, too, was robbing the poor in her selfish grasping. She talked much about this. It seemed to prey on her mind. Finally she decided to leave New York City and travel east and lecture. With the secret locked in her own bosom, she made ready SOJOXJRNER TRUTH [ 221 for leaving by placing a few articles of clothing in a piUow-case. About an hour before starting out, she went to the woman at whose house she was staying and said, "My name is no longer Isabella, but 'Sojourner', I am going east. The spirit caUs me there, and I must go". On the morning of June 1, 1843, Sojourner, now forty- three years old, set out from New York City with her pillow-case in one hand, a little basket of provisions in the other and two York shiUings in her purse. As she crossed over to Brooklyn, she says she thought of Lot's wife, and, wishing to avoid her fate, was determined not to look back until New York City was far in the distance. When night came on she sought for a lodging place wherever she could find one. It was her plan, as she explained, when she be came weary of travel and needed rest, to stop at some home for a few days. The very first time she felt the need of rest badly, as she walked along the road, a man addressed her, asking if she were looking for work. "Sir", she said in her queenly way, "that's not the object of my travels, but if you need me I can help you out for a few days". She went in and worked so faithfully that the man offered her at the time of her departure what seemed to her a large sum of money. Refusing all 222 ] UNSUNG HEROES except two or three York shillings which she con sidered sufficient to take her on her mission, she went her way. After she had traveled far out on Long Island, one evening, in her search for a night's lodging, she met two Indians who took her for an acquaint ance. They asked if she were alone. Not knowing anything at all about them, she repUed, "No, not exactly", and kept going. In her search for lodging places. Sojourner Truth occasionaUy went into dance-haUs and hovels of the lowest kind. Nevertheless, she trav eled on foot lecturing in many New York and Connecticut towns. Then led, as she claimed, by the spirit, she continued her journey to North ampton, Massachusetts. One night, while she was Uving at Northamp ton, she attended a camp-meeting which was being held in the open air. Those attending the meeting slept in tents. A company of boys present said they were going to set fire to aU the tents. Those in charge of the meeting sent for the sheriff to arrest the ring-leaders. Sojourner Truth rushed to hide in one corner of a tent. She said, "ShaU I run away and hide from the devU? Me a servant of the Living God? Have I not faith enough to go out and quell that mob when I know it is writ- SOJOURNER TRUTH [ 223 ten one shall chase a thousand and two put ten thousand to flight?" She walked out from her hiding-place, under the moonlight, to the top of a small rise of ground and began to sing: It was early in the morning — ^rt was early in the morning. Just at the break of day — When He rose — ^when He rose — ^when He rose — And went to heaven on a cloud. The boys with their sticks and clubs made a rush towards her and crowded around her. She stopped singing and after a few minutes asked in a gentle but firm tone, "Why do you come about me with clubs and sticks? I am not doing harm to any one". Many of them said, "We are not going to hurt you, old woman. We came to hear you sing". "Sing to us", another cried. "TeU us your experience", said another. "You stand and smoke so near me, I can't sing or talk", she answered. They immediately re moved their cigarettes and cigars. At their sug gestion and with their help, she climbed upon a wagon nearby and spoke and sang for nearly an hour. Upon asking the third time if they would go away and act like men, all yelled out, "Yes, yes!" She traveled a great deal, holding many meet ings for the sake of the freedom of her people. 224 ] UNSUNG HEROES Imagine this big, bony, black woman, six feet tall, walking along the highway or riding along with a small clay pipe in her mouth from which rolled columns of smoke. One evening she was riding in the State of Iowa on a raUroad train. A man sitting in a seat just behind her saw her smoking and said to her, "Do you beUeve in the Bible?" "I do", she repUed, "Well, then", said he, "what can be more filthy than the breath of a smoker? Doesn't the Bible say no unclean thing shall enter the kingdom of heaven?" "Yes, child", she answered, "but when I go to heaven I expect to leave my breath behind me". Even before the CivU War, she held meetings in many states. At the close of a meeting in Ohio one evening, a man came up to her and said, "Old woman, do you think that your talk about slavery does any good? Do you suppose people care what you say? I don't care any more for your talk than I do for the bite of a flea". "Perhaps not", she answered, "but the Lord willing, I'll keep you a-scratching." Once when she was out on a speaking tour she met a man who asked, "What business are you following now?" SOJOURNER TRUTH [ 225 She quickly replied, "Years ago when I lived in New York City my occupation was scouring brass door-knobs, but now I go about scouring copper-heads". She could neither read nor write. She seemed to know, however, something about many of the big subjects of the day, such as "Suffrage", "Tem perance" and "Abolition". She even attended the first big woman's suffrage convention, held in Ohio. This convention was held in a church. So journer Truth marched in like a queen and sat on the pulpit steps. In those days men thought women should not vote. The men and even the boys were laughing at the women and teasing them for holding such a meeting. Old "Sojourner Truth" rose and walked out in front of the speakers' table. She took off her sun- bonnet and laid it at her feet. Many of the women said, "Don't let that old woman speak. She will do us harm". But the presiding officer rapped on the table for order and "Sojourner Truth" began by saying, "Well, children, where there is so much racket there must be something out of kilter". She had something sharp to say in reply to every minister who had spoken. One minister had said that women should not vote because Eve had acted 226 ] UNSUNG HEROES SO badly. To him she said, "If the first woman God ever made was strong enough to turn the world upside down, aU alone, these together [glancing around over all the women] ought to be able to turn it right side up again". •• She took her seat in the midst of great applause. Many women rushed to her, shook her hand and said, "You have saved the day". One day while Lincoln was President of the United States, Sojourner, old and bent, walked into the marble room of the Senate Chamber. It was an hour not soon to be forgotten. Senators rose and shook her hand. They asked her to speak. As she spoke, some sat with tears in their eyes. When she had finished they shook her hand again, gave her a purse and bade her good-bye. A Wash ington Sunday paper had a long article about Sojourner Truth's speaking to the United States Senators, This article said: "Sojourner Truth has had a marvelously strange life. The leaven of love must be working in the hearts of aU people". In her old age and suffering. Sojourner Truth was supported by a friend. The end came at Battle Creek, Michigan, November 26, 1883. crispus attucks tin SON- CRISPUS ATTUCKS SPOKE AGAINST THE BRITISH SOLDIERS. Chapter XIII CRISPUS ATTUCKS 1723-1770 CRISPUS ATTUCKS was born many years ago, at some place, but nobody in the world seems to know just where. And no one seems to know anything at all about him, or about his people, except that he was a sailor. He received public notice just twice in his lifetime. The first time it was through an advertisement in a Boston newspaper, which came out on the second of October, 1750, The advertisement read: Ran away from his master, William Brown of Framing ham, on the 30th of September, last, a Molatto-Fellow, about twenty-seven years of age, named Crispus, 6 feet 2 inches high, short curl'd hair, his knees nearer together than common; had on a light color'd Bearskin Coat, plain brown Fustain Jacket, or brown all-wool one, new Buck skin Breeches, blue yarn stockings, and a checked woolen shirt. Whoever shall take up said Runaway, and convey him to his above said Master, shall have ten pounds. Old Tenor Reward, and aU necessary charges paid. Boston, Oct. 2, 1750. The name of Crispus Attucks appeared in the Boston papers just once more, and that was [229] 230 ] UNSUNG HEROES twenty years later, at the time of the Boston Mas sacre, In those days Crispus Attucks knew noth ing about the United States, and nobody else did, for there were no United States, There were only the American colonies of Great Britain. Because Great Britain knew that these colonies were angry with her, she sent several regiments of soldiers over to Boston, Massachusetts, These soldiers were to make the colonies obey England. Every one in Boston seemed to be speaking against these British soldiers. Finally a group of men led by Crispus Attucks began to pelt them with missUes and chunks of ice, and to dare them to fire their guns, but the British soldiers fired. SheUs from their guns struck Crispus Attucks and three other men. Crispus Attucks and one of the men, by the name of CaldweU, fell dead. The other two were mor tally wounded. The whole city of Boston was in an uproar. Bells were ringing everywhere, and people were running here and there as if they were crazy. In the midst of all of this excitement, the bodies of Crispus Attucks and Caldwell were taken into Faneuil Hall, It is said that their faces were looked upon by the largest gathering of people CRISPUS ATTUCKS [ 231 ever assembled there. One of the men who fell was buried from his mother's home. Another was buried from his brother's home, but Attucks and CaldweU, being strangers in the city, were buried from Faneuil Hall. The four hearses bearing the bodies of the dead men met in King Street. From there the funeral procession moved in columns six deep. There was an extended line of carriages containing the first citizens of Boston, The four bodies were buried in one grave, and over the grave was placed a stone with this inscription: Long as in Freedom's cause the wise contend. Dear to your Country shall your fame extend; WhUe to the world the lettered stone shaU tell Where CaldweU, Attucks, Gray and Maverick fell. Crispus Attucks is sometimes called a madcap, because he led the Boston Massacre charge, which was the beginning of the Revolutionary War, He had apparently been around Boston for some years and had listened to the fiery speeches of some of the orators of that day, A memorial shaft was later erected on Bos ton Common to the memory of these men, and a memorial tablet was placed on State Street in Boston. 232 ] UNSUNG HEROES CRISPUS ATTUCKS Read at the Dedication of the Crispus Attucks Monument in Boston, November 14, 1888 Where shall we seek for a hero, and where shaU we find a story ? Our laurels are wreathed for conquest, our songs for com pleted glory. But we honor a shrine unfinished, a column uncapped with pride. If we sing the deed that was sown like seed when Crispus Attucks died. Shall we take for a sign this Negro-slave with unfamiUar name — With his poor companions, nameless too, tUl their Uves leaped forth in flame? Yea, surely, the verdict is not for us to render or deny ; We can only interpret the symbol; God chose these men to die — As teachers and types, that to humble lives may chief award be made ; That from lowly ones, and rejected stones, the temple's base is laid ! When the buUets leaped from the British guns, no chance decreed their aim: Men see what the royal hirelings saw — a multitude and a flame; But beyond the flame, a mystery; five dying men in the street. While the streams of several races in the weU of a nation meet ! CRISPUS ATTUCKS [ 233 O, blood of the people! changeless tide, through century, creed and race I StUl one as the sweet salt sea is one, though tempered by sun and place; The same in the ocean currents, and the same in the shel tered seas; Forever the fountain of common hopes and kindly sympa thies ; Indian and Negro, Saxon and Celt, Teuton and Latin and Gaul- Mere surface shadow and sunshine; while the sounding unifies aU ! One love, one hope, one duty theirs ! No matter the time or ken. There never was separate heart-beat in aU the races of men I But aUen is one — of class, not race — ^he has drawn the line for himself; His roots drink Ufe from inhuman soU, from garbage of pomp and pelf; His heart beats not with the common beat, he has changed his life-stream's hue; He deems his flesh to be finer flesh, he boasts that his blood is blue: Patrician, aristocrat, tory — ^whatever his age or name. To the people's rights and Uberties, a traitor ever the same. The natural crowd is a mob to him, their prayer a vulgar rhyme; The freeman's speech is sedition, and the patriot's deed a crime. Wherever the race, the law, the land — whatever the time, or throne. The tory is always a traitor to every class but his own. 234 ] UNSUNG HEROES Thank God for a land where pride is cUpped, where arro gance stalks apart; Where law and song and loathing of wrong are words of the common heart; Where the masses honor straightforward strength, and know, when veins are bled. That the bluest blood is putrid blood — ^that the people's blood is red ! And honor to Crispus Attucks, who was leader and voice that day; The first to defy, and the first to die, with Maverick, Carr, and Gray. CaU it riot or revolution, his hand first clenched at the crown ; His feet were the first in perUous place to puU the king's flag down; His breast was the first one rent apart that Uberty's stream might flow; For our freedom now and forever, his head was the first laid low. — John Boyle O'Reilly. ALEXANDRE DUMAS Chapter XIV ALEXANDRE DUMAS Playwright and Novelist 1802-1870 ALEXANDRE DUMAS was the son of a jlV French general. Once Alexandre went to Paris with his father to see a friend, and whUe talking with this friend, the general said, pointing to Alexandre, "After I am dead, I want you to help my boy". His friend replied, "Oh, you wiU outlive me". The general, however, did not Uve long after this. He died when Alexandre was only four years old. Then this rosy-cheeked, curly-headed boy had no one to help him but his poor mother, whom he kept busy. One moment he was pointing to letters here and there and asking about them; the next moment, he was begging for a story; and the next moment, he was into something else. It was not long before this busy boy was putting words together and beginning to read, but his mother was so poor that he could not go to school until he was ten years old. The first day he went to school, he wore a suit of clothes which his mother had made out of a riding coat once worn by his father. His school- [237] 238 ] UNSUNG heroes mates hustled him around and even squirted water on him until his new suit was aU wet. He sat down and cried bitterly. Suddenly, the teacher appeared on the scene. AU the pupils gathered around the weeping boy in seeming real surprise, saying, "Why is he crying; what is the matter with him?" The teacher made his way to the boy, bent down over him, and asked, "What is the trouble, Alexandre?" Alexandre looked up and was about to open his mouth, when he saw aU the chUdren behind the teacher shaking their fists and their heads at him. The teacher suddenly turned around. AU the pupils were smiling. "Tell me what it is aU about", said the teacher. "We can't make out", said the pupUs, "he has been crying that way ever since he came." Alex andre then blurted out the whole story and showed the teacher his wet clothes. "Very well", said the teacher, "I shaU whip every one of you, and you shaU have no recess today. March into the room," In the meantime the pupils cast fierce glances at Alexandre and called him a spy. Time passed rapidly, and soon school was dismissed. AU left hurriedly, as it seemed, for their homes, but just ALEXANDRE DUMAS [ 239 around the corner, the fighting gang waited for Alexandre. The ringleader laid off his coat and walked up to him with his fists clenched. Alex andre drew back and gave him a staggering blow which knocked him flat to the ground. The others in the gang roUed up their sleeves and strutted about, saying in French what they would do. This happened in France more than one hun dred years ago, for Alexandre Dumas was born on the 24th of July, 1802. His native town was Cotterets, forty miles from Paris, and twenty- one mUes from Chateau-Thierry. After his father died, he often went hungry and shabbily clad, until he was old enough to work. One day he walked and walked, looking for a job, but nothing seemed to turn up. Now that it was about time for offices to close, he started home, but decided to try one more place. He walked into a nice-looking office and asked for work. The head man said, "Do you know how to fold letters?" Dumas hesitated a moment and replied, "I can learn, sir, pretty quickly". The man then asked, "Do you know how to get to your work on time?" "Yes, sir!" said Dumas. "Then you may come in tomorrow morning", said the man. 240 ] UNSUNG HEROES Dumas hurried home. He rushed into the house and called his mother. His cheeks and his lips were flushed like a red rose. He said, "Mother, I am so happy. I have an office job. Now I can help you, Mother". The evening passed joyously, and the next morning he walked briskly to his work. AU day long he was busy at the office, dusting the furniture, folding letters, sealing and maiUng them, running errands and taking care of visitors who came to the office. When evening came, he was very tired, but not too tired to read and study a little. Some of the boys in the office tried to tease him about studying so much, nevertheless he kept on working and studying. In a few months, he be gan to tease them because he had been promoted to a better job as clerk and they remained in their same positions. He seemed very happy and kept on reading and studying at night. One afternoon while he was reading, he saw the following advertisement, "Shakespeare's Ham let" ! At once he was interested, for he had read about the writer Shakespeare and had read the play called "Hamlet". "I must see this play; but it is given out of town", he said as he read further. However, he ALEXANDRE DUMAS [ 241 repeated, "I must see this play". He hurriedly put on the best clothes he had, reached the station, boarded the train, and in forty minutes was in the little town where the play was being given. He made his way to the theatre at once and fol lowed every movement of the actors. He said at the close of the performance, "I must see a play now in a larger theatre in Paris", This determination to go to a Paris theatre con tinued, until one afternoon he dressed in his long coat, which touched his heels, brushed his hair, which was ridiculously long, and set out for Paris, Just as he entered the theatre, some one cried out, "Oh, what a head!" People began to laugh at him. Soon an usher came up, "Tickets", said he, Alexandre handed him his ticket. He took it, looked at it and looked at Alexandre; then he shook his head, Alexandre stood there, in spite of the fact that the usher kept saying, "Your ticket is no good. Your ticket is no good". Angry be cause he had been deceived in buying his ticket, Alexandre Dumas stood there until the ushers came and put him out. In spite of his first night at a Paris theatre, Alexandre Dumas seemed enthusiastic about the theatre. He spent all of his spare time in writing 242 ] UNSUNG HEROES plays, which no publisher would publish. One publisher said to him, "Get yourself a name and then I'll publish your books". Nevertheless, he often visited the theatre and kept on studying and writing, FinaUy, he finished a play which he named "Christine". One day, although he was just a boy clerk in an office, he had the boldness to say, " 'Christine' wUl be played in the finest theatre in Paris", Soon after "Christine" was finished, the great theatre of Paris accepted it. On the evening that the first performance of it was given, Alexandre Dumas sat in this fine Paris theatre with a cheap suit of clothes on, whUe aU around him sat the great actors of France in their finery and splen dor. The curtain rose on the beautiful scenery. The actors came forward, talking, making ges tures and performing. The audience seemed pleased with every act and applauded loudly. When the performance was all over and the curtain had fallen, Dumas ran home to teU his mother of this wonderful evening. He ran so fast that he lost the only copy of his play. However, the play was all in his head and so he sat up that night and wrote it out again. He set to work, and in two months, wrote an other play, which he called "Henri III". Just as ALEXANDRE DUMAS [243 he was about finishing this play, the head man in his office said to him one day, "Dumas, you must either give all of your time to your office work or lose your job. I can't have any theatre man around". He held his job, however, and finished the play. "Henri III" was very popular. On the evening when a performance of it was given, the gallery of the theatre was fiUed with princes and nobles. The boxes were filled with ladies glittering with diamonds. All the writers of Paris were out. Every seat in the theatre was taken a week before the play was given. While the play was being presented, Dumas hurried away between the acts to see his mother, who was very iU. The next day, every one in Paris was talking about this brilliant young writer. The rich people of Paris sent so many beautiful flowers to his sick mother that they almost filled the little room where she lay. By two o'clock that afternoon, the first copy of this play, called the manuscript, had been sold for $1,164. Each per formance of the play brought him $1,212.50. In later years, he even had a grand theatre of his own buUt for his plays. In addition to his plays, Dumas wrote stories. One day he sat down and wrote a story very 244 ] UNSUNG HEROES quickly. "Ah," he said, "I am going to keep at this." He kept at it until he wrote the two great stories called "The Count of Monte Cristo" and "The Three Musketeers". He also wrote many stories about his grandmother, who was a native African woman. In one year, it is said he pub lished about forty books. Once he promised to write so many books for a certain company that the company began to look into the matter, and discovered that Dumas was hiring young writers to write stories, which he edited and changed to suit his own style. Dumas was arrested and tried. The judge said, "Alex andre Dumas is paying these writers for then- works and is thus helping them. He is so chang ing their writings that they sound Uke his own. He is not guilty of any offense". Many young writers, apparently fond of him, spoke in his de fense. His door was hardly free for a moment from strangers, who were coming and going, ask ing his opinion on their writings. It is said that he was just about as extravagant as he was famous. He wore handsome and even gaudy clothes, kept fine horses, and gave many dinner parties. After some years all this was changed. He lost control of his great theatre and was sunk in debt. ALEXANDRE DUMAS [ 245 Years passed and little was heard of his plays ; but later they were revived. On the same night, three years before his death, four of his plays were being given in four of the largest theatres in Paris. Again people in the theatres were crying out, "Long live Dumas!" Even in his old age, he worked ahnost without stopping. While he was in the home of his son in Puys, France, his brain and his limbs became so paralyzed that he died on the fifth of December, 1870. Two years after his death, the name of the street in Paris on which his house stood was changed to "Rue Alexandre Dumas", or Alex ander Dumas Street, in memory of him. Thirteen years after his death, the French people erected in Paris a monument to his mem ory. He is represented sitting with a book in his left hand and a pen in his right; in front of the pedestal there are three figures — a young woman represented as reading, and two men, one of them in workman's garb; the idea being to show how popular he was among all classes. At the back of the pedestal, there is a fine figure of one dressed as a musketeer or soldier. The citizens of his native town — Cotterets — also erected to his memory a monument on Alex ander Dumas Street. PAUL CUFFE PAUL CUFFE S BRIG. Chapter XV PAUL CUFFE The Sailor 1759-1817 THE Cuffe home at Westport, Massachusetts, was always ringing with laughter and merri ment. Somebody in that famUy of four sturdy boys, six girls, mother and father, was ever ready with a snappy joke, or a ghostly yarn which sometimes made even the old folks afraid to go to bed. One night the family was seated around the hearth. Father Cuffe began to tell what he called a true story about his native country. He rose and pictured a great boa-constrictor gliding into his African home and swaUowing a little boy. As he represented the great open mouth of that huge snake with the boy slipping down its throat, one of the girls jumped and looked behind her. The boys laughed very heartily and pointed their fm- gers at her, saying, "You thought that boa-con strictor had you!" Mrs. Cuffe, who was of Indian descent, attracted the family's attention just at [249] 250 ] UNSUNG HEROES that point by springing forth suddenly with a war-whoop and dance. As soon as this came to an end, Paul Cuffe, the youngest of the boys, began telling one of his whale stories. He, too, arose and described his boat as it rocked to and fro on a stormy sea. He pictured his men tugging at a great whale, which suddenly pulled one of them overboard. Just then one of Paul's brothers gave a quick jerk on Paul's coat-tail. Paul leaped forward, looked back and landed flat on the floor. His sisters and brothers laughed and laughed until some of them said their sides ached. Such evenings in the Cuffe farmhouse at West- port were common untU Father Cuffe died, Paul was then fourteen years old. For two years, he and his brothers worked their poor farm of one hundred acres and thus supported their mother and sisters as best they could. Every day spent in the field seemed harder and harder to Paul. He had made up his mind, he said, to try his fortune on the sea, but dreaded to tell his mother. One morning he lingered around until there was no one in the house but him and his mother. "Mother", he said, "I am big for my age, and if I can get a job on a schooner, I can PAUL CUFFE [251 earn a man's wages, I can make it on the sea better than on the land," His mother held up both hands, saying, "Paul, my dear boy, can't you find something else to do? Sailors are such rough men. They drink, they swear, they are reckless". "Mother", said he, "I have always longed to be a sailor. Give me your consent." For several days there was no laughter in the Cuffe home. Paul's mother said she feared he would be swallowed up by the angry waves or by a whale. During these days, Paul was as busy as he could be trying to get a job on a schooner. Final ly, he succeeded in hiring out as a common hand on a vessel leaving on a whaling expedition for the Bay of Mexico. His mother was sure now that Paul would never return alive, so she gave him a small Bible and her blessing. He kissed her good bye, pressed her hand and assured her that he would remain a good boy. By nine o'clock the next morning, eveiything was in readiness for the start. The wind was favor able. The skipper was on board. Every sailor was busy making saU or getting up the heavy anchor. At length the schooner glided away from the shore. For a time, Paul and the rest of the hands 252 ] UNSUNG HEROES were busy coiUng lines, stowing away odds and ends and making the vessel comfortable. As soon as Paul had a few spare moments he fiUed a smaU keg with fresh water and put several dozen ship- biscuits into a box, around which he wrapped an old oilskin jacket. One of the boys on board laughed at him and said in loud tones, "Are you afraid of being lost in a fog? Boy, your mamma's apron strings are many miles away. You should have been tied to them instead of being on a boat," One of Paul's friends started to answer back, but Paul said, "Let him alone. It will make him feel worse not to be noticed at all". The schooner tugged away until the end of the journey was finally reached. The trip was excit ing to say the least; and their return trip was equally exciting. They had been gone for some weeks. In those days vessels traveled only about seven knots an hour, Paul had just a few hours at home with his mother before setting out on a trip to the West Indies. At the end of this trip, he seemed to feel that he was a full-fledged sailor. It had taken him only two weeks to get sufficient experience in navigation to command a vessel. He went out on a third voyage, but the Revolutionary War broke out. His ship was run down and cap- PAUL CUFFE [ 253 tured by a British ship, and he was held as a pris oner for three months. After his release, Cuffe had to give up the sea for two years. He visited the Island of Cutty- hunk, near New Bedford, where he was born. Then he returned to his home at Westport, worked on the farm and gave much of his time to the betterment of his people. He was not yet twenty years old, but he and his brother drew up a petition and presented it to the Massachusetts Legislature. This petition asked that all free people of Massachusetts be given the fuU rights of citizens. The Massachusetts Legislature care fuUy considered this respectful petition. Soon afterward it passed an act granting to all free people, irrespective of color, the full privileges of citizens. Cuffe was busy these two years and yet his old longing for business and for the sea, he said, kept steahng over him. He laid before his brother, David, a plan for trading with the people of Con necticut. His brother agreed to the plan. They built an open boat and put out to sea, but his brother's fears so increased that he resolved to turn back, Paul finally submitted and returned home. He worked a while for more materials and 254 ] UNSUNG HEROES again put out to sea, but soon lost all he had. He went home and set himself to the task of making a boat from keel to gunwale. It was without a deck, but Paul had been on whaling expeditions and was thereby skUled in its management. He launched his boat into the ocean. As he was steering for Cuttyhunk, one of the EUzabeth Is lands, to consult his brother about future plans, he was discovered by pirates, who chased his ves sel, ran it down and captured both it and him. He went home again and applied to his brother David for materials to build another boat. When the boat was finished, through his credit (on his respectability), he purchased a cargo and set out for Nantucket. On this voyage, he was again chased by pirates, but he escaped them as night came on. However, his boat struck upon a rock and was so injured that he had to return home for repairs. As soon as the repairs were made, he set out again for Nantucket and arrived in safety. On his return trip, however, he feU into the hands of pirates and was robbed of all he had except his boat. He made his way home, secured a smaU cargo and again directed his course towards Nan tucket, where he sold his cargo to advantage. On his return to his home this time, he secured a small covered boat of about twelve tons, hired PAUL CUFFE [ 255 some one to assist him, and made advantageous voyages to different parts of Connecticut. He now became attached to a young woman — a descendant of his mother's tribe — whom he mar ried. After his marriage he worked on a farm for a short while, then removed his family to a small house on the Westport River. He procured a boat of eighteen tons in which he sailed to the banks of St. George, obtained a valuable cargo of codfish and landed at home safely. Cuffe soon entered partnership with his brother-in-law and built a vessel of twenty-five tons, in which they made voyages to Newfound land and BeUe Isle, securing profits enough to build a vessel of forty-two tons. After the death of Cuffe's father he learned to read, write and do some arithmetic and yet he often said, "I would have made fewer mistakes and a great deal more money had I been an educated man." He caUed the people of his neighborhood together and spoke to them on the need of a schoolhouse and a teacher for their children. No two of the parents seemed to agree on anything. They talked and discussed and separated, each going to his own home. Paul Cuffe took the mat ter into his own hands, erected a schoolhouse on his own land and opened it to the public. 256 ] UNSUNG HEROES With this task completed, he set out to the Straits of BeUe Isle on a whaUng expedition, with two boats and ten men. Although he was iU pre pared for the business, he and his crew killed six whales; two of which died at Paul's own hands. In due season he returned home heavily laden with bone and oil. After selling his cargo, he bought iron and other materials, built a schooner of sixty-nine tons and launched it, in 1795, under the name of "The Ranger", He sold his two boats and placed on board "The Ranger", which was manned by a black crew, a cargo valued at two thousand dol lars, and sailed for Norfolk, Virginia. This trip and similar ones brought him handsome returns. With some of this money he bought a farm and placed it under the management of his broth er-in-law. He also took one-half share in building and fitting out a large vessel, and three-fourths' share in building and fitting out still a larger one. One of these vessels, of one hundred and sixty-two tons burden, was commanded by Paul Cuffe's nephew. The other one, "The Alpha" by name, of two hundred and sixty-eight tons, was com manded by Paul Cuffe himself, with seven other Negroes making up the crew. In 1811, Paul Cuffe and his crew, in command PAUL CUFFE [ 257 of "The Alpha" sailed for Sierra Leone, Africa, After many days of travel and stormy sea, they arrived in Sierra Leone, Cuffe, attended by sev eral natives, made his way to the governor's office, where he remained for a long conversation and visit with the Governor. FoUowing this, he entered into many of the natives' experiences. He put on armor and went elephant-hunting with them. Once he joined a party on a leopard hunt. One of the party said in his native tongue, "These leopards go about in pairs, and sometimes raid farms and carry off young children and chickens after dark. They step rather softly, steal upon one and attack him in the back". When the party reached a certain spot, every one stopped. Some of them proceeded to drive down two posts. Others loaded a long- range gun heavily and fastened it to these posts with the butt end resting on the posts and the muzzle about two feet from them. Then they placed a big piece of meat around the muzzle of the gun and drew a strong string round one of the posts connecting the meat to the trigger. All was in readiness now for Mr. Leopard; and so the party left the spot. After a long wait a leopard came walking softly by and sniffing around. He walked up to the meat to take a bite. "Pow", 258 ] UNSUNG HEROES went the rifle. The leopard fell dead. Paul Cuffe and his party came out from their hiding place, and stood around looking at the beast. Cuffe seemed very busy, even on such trips, studying the needs of natives and planning how the people in London might help them. One morn ing a monkey party came to take him along. He could not resist the invitation. Every one in the party had a sword or a stick. Several monkeys were caught that day and brought in tied hand and foot and hung on poles. The suckling ones were carried clinging underneath their mothers' bodies, Cuffe continued to study the natives and finally recommended to the Governor that they form "The Friendly Society of Sierra Leone" as a help to the people. After this was done, he went to England on two trips. Then he returned to the United States in order to get teachers to take back with him, but the War of 1812 broke out, and his plans were delayed. For several years he had to remain in the United States. All this time, however, he was arranging to take teachers to Sierra Leone. Toward the end of the year 1815, he saUed with thirty-eight teachers for Sierra Leone. For fifty- five days they were tossed and driven on the ocean. Even African soil, they said, was a welcome sight PAUL CUFFE [ 259 to them. They finally reached their destination safely. Cuffe bore the entire expense of the trip. He remained in Sierra Leone two months, dur ing which time he wrote a very touching letter to the natives. It is said that his departure from them was like that of a father taking leave of his children. Cuffe returned to his own country, where he became ill early in 1817. From then until the day of his death, on the seventh of the following Sep tember, he was busy writing letters and making friends for the natives of Sierra Leone. Some one has said that he devoted even the thoughts of his dying piUow to the interests of the African people. ALEXANDER CRUMMELL Chapter XVI ALEXANDER CRUMMELL Minister and Missionary 1819-1898 ONE moonlight night about eighty-four years ago, a stage-coach rattled along from Han over, New Hampshire, towards Albany, New York. Away up on the top of this stage-coach, sat two fast friends, Alexander Crummell and Henry Highland Garnet, and twelve other Negro boys. Apparently not even the rattle of the stage coach wheels, or the jingle of the traces, or the hoot of an owl far off in the woods, disturbed their thoughts. It is true, they had been riding aU day and had been under excitement for two days be fore they left the little town of Canaan near Hanover, but they neither slept nor stirred. A thoughtless gang of Canaan boys had yoked about one hundred and ninety oxen together and driven them up to the little schoolhouse. Here and there, one ox tried to go one way while his mate tried to go the other way, but several yoke of them did team-work. They later bowed their necks and chased off through the woods, with the boys [263 ] 264 ] UNSUNG HEROES swinging to the lines and bumping against stumps and logs and trees. Finally, with the assistance of big boys, these unruly animals were brought back to the schoolhouse, to which the oxen were hitched. At the crack of many long whips and the sound of loud calls, "Get up there, now! Pull steady", the oxen gave a mighty pull, and the sides of the little schoolhouse began to crack. After two days of being pulled and pushed about, the little schoolhouse tottered into the swamp. The village boys, who had declared they would not let the Negro boys remain there and go to school, gave a cheer and a whoop. StiU more excitement followed until Crummell and his friends took the stage-coach en route for theh* homes. This bitter experience seemed only to sharpen Crummell's desire for an education. In a few months, he was off again to a school some distance from New York City — his birthplace and home. After his graduation from that school, a cere mony was performed and he became a priest in the Episcopal Church. He worked at home a while, and then crossed the Atlantic Ocean and preached throughout England. While he was there, he entered a great ALEXANDER CRUMMELL [265 university known as Cambridge University, from which he was graduated at the age of thirty-four. Crummell often spoke of wishing to return to the United States to see his family and friends, but because of poor health, he went to Africa to do missionary work and, as he said, to die. Strange to say, the hot climate and the African fever seemed to disturb him not at all; in fact, his health improved. For twenty years, he remained there and preached to the people, and taught in the Liberian CoUege. The natives often asked why he kept at his writing so closely. Later they discovered that he was writing a book called "The Future of Africa", During his twenty years in Africa, he made only two visits to the United States, In 1873 he returned for good and took charge of an Epis copal Mission in Washington, D. C. He presided over this Mission, which developed into what is now St, Luke's Church, for twenty-two years. Often during these years, he went by invitation to the leading cities of the country, either to preach or to give lectures. In 1896, he founded "The American Negro Academy" at Washington, D, C, and gave some lectures before this or ganization. 266 J UNSUNG HEROES He was a striking character, tall, erect and of noble carriage. He was dignified and fearless in manner, yet easy to approach. During the last year of his life, he worked at his desk from six to seven hours every day, when he was able to write. Finally, for a little change, he went to Point Pleasant, New Jersey, and whUe there, passed away on the tenth of September, 1898. Just a few hours before his death, he dic tated a letter to Paul Laurence Dunbar on the phUosophy of poetry. JOHN MERCER LANGSTON Chapter XVII JOHN MERCER LANGSTON Scholar and Congressman 1829-1897 JOHN MERCER LANGSTON was a fraU child, only four years old, when his father and mother died. According to the will of his father. Captain Quarrels, he and his two brothers were to have aU of their father's land, lying on Hickory Creek in Louisa County, Virginia. They were to have all of his stock of horses, cattle, sheep and bees, together with household and kitchen furni ture and plantation utensils. They were also to have aU of his money, in cash or in the form of debts due or bank stocks. Provision was made in Captain Quarrels's will for selling his property and dividing the money among John Mercer and his other boys, should they leave Louisa County, The time came when this provision in the will was to be carried out, John Mercer and his broth ers, with their attendants, remained in Louisa County two months after their father's death, get ting ready to start for Ohio, During this period of preparation, they secured [269] 270 ] UNSUNG HEROES the proper papers to take on such a journey. They and their attendants obtained a carry-all — a light wagon with horses and harness — and set out early one October morning, in 1834, to what was then known as a far-away state — Ohio. The road over which they traveled was mountainous and fre quently broken by small swoUen streams which they had to ford, and rivers which they had to cross by means of crude ferries. However, there seemed to be no cause for anxiety except for little, frail John Mercer. They continued their journey for one week, traveling by day and pitching their tents at night. One evening while some one was unhitching the horses, and two of them were pitching the tent, and John Mercer and the rest of them were bring ing water from a nearby stream, a man on horse back with saddle bags came down the highway. The older Langston boys, recognizing him as their half-brother, whom their father had sent to Ohio long before his death, ran to meet him. Little John Mercer, whom he had never seen before, he took up in his arms, caressed him and looked at him, saying, "My! but you are like my dear mother, Lucy Langston ! You have in a marked degree her Indian family likeness!" All of the boys made their way to the tent. The night passed. JOHN MERCER LANGSTON [ 271 The next day as the party proceeded on its journey, the half-brother shortened the stirrup leathers of his saddle to fit John Mercer's legs, and put him in his saddle. John Mercer took hold of the bridle reins timidly, but soon began to knock his little legs against the sides of the horse, saying, "Get up, sir". At length, he seemed weary and was again taken into the battered carry-all. They traveled on for two weeks longer, until they reached Chillicothe, Ohio. John Mercer was taken to the home of Colonel Gooch, who once on a visit to Captain Quarrels, had promised that when John Mercer came to Ohio he would care for him and educate him. John Mercer was given a hot bath, his clothing was changed, and a chair was placed at the table for him by the side of Mrs. Gooch, He ate heart ily, romped and played, and grew rapidly under the kind treatment of the Gooch family. Soon he was known to the neighbors as "Johnnie Gooch", Four years for him in the Gooch home passed. One beautiful Monday morning, in 1837, he, with his little new dinner-pail in one hand, and his book in the other, accompanied by Mr. Gooch, started out to school. Clad in his neat dress of round about and pants of Kentucky blue jeans, he and 272 ] UNSUNG HEROES Mr. Gooch trudged along until they reached the schoolhouse. John Mercer was soon assigned to his class and his seat. As he sat upon the high seat without a back, he almost toppled over backwards. Then, apparently afraid of faUing backwards, he leaned so far forward that he fell over on his nose. He twisted and turned on the tiresome seat for sev eral days, then told his teacher that he was needed at home at two o'clock every day to drive up the cows. For one week he went home every day at two o'clock. Mr. Gooch asked the reason for John Mercer's early arrival home every day, and in formed the teacher that John Mercer's whole business was to attend school. Many agents were in Chillicothe at this time teUing of the rich farm land in Missouri that could be bought very cheaply. The Gooch famUy was among the old residents who were selling out and preparing to leave for Missouri, They chartered a canal-boat and a steamboat for moving their things, and planned for a wagon and team to take the family across the country, Mr, Gooch caUed John Mercer in and asked if he wished to go with them, John Mercer replied, "I do. Colonel Gooch", "Then you shall go", said the colonel. JOHN MERCER LANGSTON [ 273 When everything was in readiness, the family set out one night on their journey. The next morning, John Mercer spied two objects in the distance coming towards them. As they ap proached, he saw that they were two men, and one of them was his half-brother. The other gentle man made himself known at once as the sheriff, who had come to arrest Colonel Gooch for kid napping John Mercer, Colonel Gooch, obeying orders, saddled his horse, took John Mercer up behind him and rode with the men back to ChUU cothe, The court ruled that John Mercer should be left there. Upon the advice of some one, he returned to the old Gooch home and farm, which were now in the hands of another. The first question the man asked was, ""What, sir, can you do?" John Mercer promptly answered, "I can't do anything". The farmer then asked, "How do you expect to hve? Get the horse and cart out and haul those bricks up from the distant field". John Mercer started forth to try to hitch the horse to the cart and to haul the bricks. The third day, the farmer said, "You are doing well, and if you continue, you will make a good driver". The boy not only hauled bricks, but he 274 ] UNSUNG HEROES plowed and hoed and became strong and healthy. On leaving the farmer, he went to Cincinnati, Ohio, and secured work for afternoons and Sat urdays, in a barber shop. Thus was he soon able to enter school in that city. One day as he sat with his class, studying his lesson, a man appeared at the door and asked for him. His teacher said, "John Mercer may go to the door. Some one wishes to see him". He arose and walked forth. At the sight of Colonel Gooch, who had sought him in Chillicothe and had come on to Cincinnati, he leaped out of the door and grasped his hand. They talked for a long, long time. Mr. Gooch kissed him good-bye, and John Mercer promised to join him in Missouri later on, John Mercer's two years' stay in Cincinnati was interrupted by a call to ChiUicothe, on busi ness connected with his father's estate. AVhUe he was on this trip, he met an Oberlin College stu dent who was teaching in Chillicothe, and who agreed to give him lessons. He studied under this teacher until his brothers agreed to send him to Oberlin College, On Thursday morning, March 1, 1844, he and his teacher left ChiUicothe for Oberlin. When they arrived the foUowing Sunday morning, they saw hundreds of college students making their JOHN MERCER LANGSTON [ 275 way through the muddy streets to early prayer service and Sunday School, Lodging for the night was secured in the only hotel then in Ober lin, The next day John Mercer registered and was taken to the home in which he was to live. Seeing how busy every one about the college was, he secured his books and settled down to hard study. Before many weeks had passed, he was in vited to join two college clubs — "The Young Men's Lyceum" and "The Union Society". Be cause of having friends in "the Union Society", he joined it, and was immediately called upon to take part in a debate. On the evening of the debate, a very capable young man came forward as the first speaker. When he had finished, another young man was called forth. He, too, presented his side of the question in a convincing manner. John Mercer Langston was called upon as the third speaker. He came forward, took his place on the platform and said, "Mr. President — Mr. President". He stood there unable to say another word. Finally he rushed to his seat and began to cry. He wiped away the copious tears until his handkerchief, his cap and his coat sleeve were soaking wet. Then he hurried to his room, threw himself on the bed and cried until his pillow was wet through. The next 276 ] UNSUNG HEROES morning, he arose with his face and eyes all swol len. As he stood before his little mirror, he held up his hands to God, with the vow that he would never fail again in making a speech. When friends sympathized with him, he said, "I thank you, but never mind". After leaving breakfast, as John Mercer walked up the street, he met a friend who said he was called home. Immediately he asked John Mercer to take his place in the Society debate the next Thursday evening. He agreed at once and began to get ready for the debate. Thursday evening came; the haU was full of young men. When John Mercer was caUed forth, he took his place, addressed the presiding officer and spoke his ten minutes amid applause. Some young man called out, "Mr. President, I move by common consent that Langston be given ten minutes more". The motion was carried and Langston spoke ten minutes more, interrupted by frequent applause. He remained in college to the end of the faU term, and returned to Chillicothe. No sooner had he arrived, than a committee called upon him to get him to teach school. Hicks Settlement, eight miles in the country, needed a teacher. The com mittee offered him ten dollars a month — and JOHN MERCER LANGSTON [ 277 "board around". He accepted the position, al though he was not quite sixteen years old. When he reached the schoolhouse the first morning, he says that he was more greatly surprised perhaps than any one else, because he was smaller than any of the pupils except one. "Boarding around" had its surprises, too. Every week he stayed with a different family, and each family tried to outdo the preceding ones in furnishing him good things to eat. Sometimes he just had to eat and eat until he felt like a stuffed goose. Finally he made arrangements with a man to give him and his son lessons and thereby obtain from them board and lodging for himself and his horse. At the end of every month, the school committee waited upon him and counted out to him his ten dollars in five and ten-cent pieces. When Langston's three months at Hicks Set tlement were up, he sat down with his bag of five- and ten-cent pieces and counted out the thirty dollars. Before many days had passed, he was on his way back to Oberlin College, He entered and worked hard for four years, graduating at the age of twenty as a Bachelor of Arts — "B,A." He continued his studies at Ober lin and received his Master's degree — "M.A," 278 ] UNSUNG HEROES Three years later, he was graduated from the Oberlin Theological Seminary as a Bachelor of Divinity — "B,D." He remained in OberUn and studied law under a prominent judge. When he had finished this course, he passed his examina tions and under great odds was admitted to the bar in Ohio, where he practiced for a time and won notable cases. He often said, in later years, that around Ober lin CoUege centered many happy memories. He courted and married an Oberlin CoUege girl by the name of Miss Wall. He settled in Oberlin and practiced law there until the bloody CivU War. At that time, the United States was calUng to her aid the ablest men she could find. John Mercer Langston was among those called. He responded immediately and began to travel over the West and the North getting men for the army. He secured them for three regiments — the Fifty- fourth and Fifty-fifth Massachusetts and the Fifth United States of Ohio. After the war he continued to travel for the Government for two years and a half, helping the people organize schools for their children. When that work was finished, Howard Univer sity called him to organize her Law Department. JOHN MERCER LANGSTON [ 279 For seven years he taught in that Department, and served for a time as Acting President of the University. He was admitted to practice law before the Supreme Court of the United States. And the President of the United States appointed him a member of the Board of Health of the Dis trict of Columbia. Later on, another President appointed him Minister to Hayti, at a salary of $7,500 a year. After serving on that island for seven years, he returned to the United States and soon afterward was elected President of the Virginia State Col lege at Petersburg. The state of Virginia claimed him as her own son. She honored him as a scholar ly man. She elected him to the United States House of Representatives, in which he took his seat in 1890, His last years were spent with his family at his home on College Street, Washington, District of Columbia. Before his death, November 15, 1897, he published a book of addresses called "Freedom and Citizenship", YALE UNIVERSITY a39002 0012itl638b