Wednesday, September 6, 2023

Elizabeth Jennings Graham & Chester Arthur

 

Pennsylvania quilt offered in a James Julia auction featuring a bandana
from Chester A. Arthur's 1880 campaign with Presidential candidate James Garfield.

Garfield was assassinated and Arthur 
 became president in 1881. 


Arthur is not a memorable president but as a young man, a New York City lawyer, he had a reputation as a rebellious agitator for civil rights. Born in Vermont, he was raised by parents Malvina Stone and Baptist preacher William Arthur, who were driven to New York by neighbors infuriated at William's antislavery sermons.

Chester Alan Arthur (1829-1886) at about 30

Chester came to New York City in the early '50s to work as a law student with abolitionist E.D. Culver,
becoming a partner in the firm of Culver, Parker & Arthur in 1853.


A year earlier the firm had taken on the case of eight enslaved Virginians in transit through New York to Texas. Once in the free state of New York where slavery had ended in 1827 their case was taken up by Louis Napoleon, a freeman who petitioned the court to liberate them and with Culver and Arthur won the case.


In 1855 Culver, Parker & Arthur took on the suit of Elizabeth Jennings, a 25-year-old free African-American woman who had been removed from a whites-only streetcar in the summer of 1854.

Corner of Pearl & Chatham Streets in Lower Manhattan, 1863
One hailed a streetcar, which stopped to take you aboard for a 6-cent fare.

Elizabeth is now remembered as a church organist on her way to Sunday services who, like Rosa Parks a hundred years later, impulsively refused to follow an unreasonable demand. The conductor physically removed her and companion Sara Adams. Elizabeth sought legal redress from Chester Arthur and the attorneys won a judgment in a Brooklyn court against the Third Avenue Railway Company, asking for $500 in damages, over $15,000 in today's terms. They won half that amount.

Elizabeth Jennings Graham (1827-1901)
Poor photo of her later in life.


City directory, mid 1850s

In the 1850s Elizabeth was living in what we call Tribeca with brother James in a boarding house at 167 Church Street run by her parents Thomas L. and Elizabeth Cartwright Jennings. James was a teacher, the same career Elizabeth would choose. Siblings William, Matilda and Thomas II are living on their own.

Thomas L. Jennings (1791-1859)

Elizabeth's was not a typical African-American family at the time. Thomas Jennings, once a tailor, had made money from a patented dry-cleaning process. He bought his wife's freedom and then used his time and fortune to become a civil rights activist, with a particular interest in public transportation. With James McCune Smith and James W.C. Pennington in 1855 he founded the New York Legal Rights Association, dedicated to fighting segregated transportation.

His son Thomas, a Boston dentist, was evicted from a whites-only rail car in Massachusetts in 1841.

Account by a white friend of Thomas II in The Liberator,
November 2, 1841

Thomas Sr. testified in court in the related James W.C. Pennington case in 1859.

Thomas Downing (1791-1866)

Famous New York oyster chef and restauranteur Thomas Downing (born the same year as Thomas Jennings) was the plaintiff in at least two cases against transportation companies, the first in 1838. In 1855 he was evicted from a whites-only car on the Harlem Railroad and severely beaten.

As peers and neighbors Downing and Jennings must have known each other
(and possibly worked together.)

Portraying Thomas Jennings's daughter as a young woman who spontaneously caused a precedent- setting rebellion ignores the probable history of what was going on among the African-American activists in the city. 

Library of Congress

Perhaps they and their lawyers realized that men removed forcibly from streetcars did not elicit much public sympathy or many favorable rulings. But what if a pretty, young church organist was the victim of such violence? Was it a set-up engineered by the Jenningses and the sympathetic law firm Culver, Parker & Arthur? Did Elizabeth and friend Sara agree to participate in a drama?

Today we'd rather see Elizabeth as an earlier-day Rosa Parks but do remember that portraying her as a victim falls into stereotyping women as helpless---exactly the image those civil rights activists hoped to exploit.

Star picturing Garfield and Arthur once in Julie Powell's collection;
 now in Boston's Museum of Fine Arts.


Elizabeth continued to make news. She graduated from the "Colored Normal School," a segregated teacher's college and hoped to join other city music teachers at the Academy of Music celebrating the event. But as reported in The Liberator and other papers in 1857 she and Helen Appo were banished from the stage. No less than Susan B. Anthony took up the protest at a state teachers' convention.


Elizabeth was her father's daughter. Many young Black women were insulted but few enlisted Susan B. in their cause.

Elizabeth married Charles Graham (1830-1867) of Long Branch, New Jersey, a year before the Civil War began. They spent the first few war years in New York City, which became even more difficult for African-Americans as plug-uglies and working people expressed resentment of the antislavery cause and new conscription laws. The New York Draft Riots in July, 1863 resulted in over 100 deaths and the burning of the city's Colored Orphan Asylum.


The Grahams had their own disaster to deal with as their baby Thomas J. Graham died during the riots, forcing his parents to dodge the insurrectionists while trying to give him a funeral. They left the city for New Jersey where Charles died a few years after the war.


Elizabeth had a savings account at the Freedman's Savings Bank, summarizing her post-war life. She continued to teach, opening an innovative Kindergarten class for Black children in New York with two friends.

1882 City Directory


Brooklyn Eagle account, February, 1855

You may want to continue to imagine Elizabeth in her role as a victim of bigotry acting on impulse, lucky enough to find young Chester Arthur as a lawyer, but you also might prefer to think of the law firm and the Jennings family as sophisticated partners in a successful small battle in a large war.


We can give Elizabeth and Chester A. a little more respect.

Many books and articles discuss Elizabeth's protest from the Rosa Parks perspective that resonates in our current culture. But was she a knowing protagonist in a carefully planned event? 

Saturday, September 2, 2023

Wednesday Posts Only

 

Unknown girl with mourning ribbons and photograph
of a soldier

I began this CivilWarQuilts blog in 2010 to commemorate the 150th anniversary of the beginning of the terrible rebellion. I had no idea I'd find so many women's stories (most associated with quilts).

Sampler applique from a Jeffrey Evans Auction

I see I have done 1,130 posts since then, usually a woman's story on Saturdays and a pattern on Wednesdays. At the beginning I thought I'd keep this up for a year or two until I ran out of stories. 

But 16 million American women lived through that war. I'll never run out of stories.

An old collection of my Civil War repro prints

One reason to maintain a Civil War Quilts blog was to give readers ideas on how to use all those Civil War reproduction fabrics I and other designers were creating at the time. But few accurate mid-19th century prints are being produced today.

 (If quilters don't buy; shops don't order; companies don't produce.)
You've all got plenty of repro prints.

And I am trying to cut back on my sitting at a computer---writing blog posts certainly kept me entertained during the pandemic lock-down. Now there are other things to do besides sift through digital genealogy records so I am going to cut back on the number of posts each week. I've been posting Saturdays & Wednesdays. From now on just Wednesdays.

Thistle Tomo of Japan makes tiny versions...Her Atlanta Garden miniatures

I'll still be creating block of the month programs, probably both pieced and appliqued every year (each accompanied by historical tales.). Patterns posted on Wednesdays. And I'll still be doing short posts on women's stories and showing readers' progress on the BOM series.

But maybe I'll get more sewing done!

Look for a story about a very interesting woman next Wednesday.


Wednesday, August 30, 2023

Herbarium #6: Grape for the Axtell Sisters in the West

 


Herbarium #6 Grape by Becky Collis for the Axtell Sisters 

In 1836 New Yorkers Mary Ann (1849) & Harriette Hannah Axtell (1849) went west to Indianapolis,
Indiana, taking either the Ohio River and/or the new National Road.

Indianapolis in 1825

They had been asked by the Indiana Presbyterians in the town founded about 15 years earlier to leave their positions at the Geneva Female Seminary in New York and bring culture to young women on the frontier.

The Geneva Female Seminary

1847 Ad
The Indianapolis Female Institute taught science (natural philosophy), including botany,
worsted work (extra fee) and manners---to say nothing of Presbyterianism.

Mrs. Moores remembers in 1887

Grape by Denniele Bohannon

Orpha Annette "Nettie" Tyler Flanner (1824–1914)

One student who thrived in the botany classes was Ohio boarder Orpha Tyler Flanner, who named her eldest son Linnaeus for the famous taxonomist. Over her life "Nettie" Flanner created an herbarium of over 15,000 specimens, which she donated to Ohio's Marietta College.

Read more about Nettie Flanner and her herbarium here:
https://civilwarquilts.blogspot.com/2022/10/nettie-tyler-flanners-civil-war.html

19th Century Humor

In May, 1846 Harriett married George D. Hay of Vincennes, Indiana. A year later she gave birth to Henry Gurley Hay. Sisters Mary Jane and Harriett may have been afflicted with consumption (tuberculosis) and had to give up their school.

Envelope showing a later version of the school after the Axtells left in 1849.
Mr. & Mrs. Mills began a new school in the same building in October.

Harriet died that month at the age of 33.

The 1850 census shows widowed husband George and two-year old Henry in Vincennes.


Grape by Becky Brown

Mary Ann, "deranged" by religion, went south after her sister's death. Hoping the climate of the West Indies would restore her health she boarded a steamer heading perhaps for Havana. She died aboard the Henry Clay off Pensacola, Florida in December, 1849. Her student Nettie Flanner also became a bit deranged later about religion---a side effect one supposes of the hopelessness of a belief in predestination and attempts to meet high standards that could never be met.

The Block


Collection of the Shelburne Museum
Botanizing students in the Indiana woods might collect many types of grapes.

Riverbank Grapes Vitis riparia
Leaves vary but they are heart-shaped (chordate) with multiple lobes.

All eight of our inspiration samplers feature a grape block with similar detail in the leaf's serrated edges. The number of grapes varies.

Two sheets this month.
Our pattern is short on serrations but long on grapes.


Printed dots carefully cut by Barbara Brackman

Were our seven samplers a product of the botany/needlework classes at the Indianapolis Female Institute? It does seem a little too far west, beyond Pennsylvania and Ohio and the Axtells' New York, where the sampler style flourished. The school closed in 1849--- maybe a little early for our undated quilts.