San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

ARCHAEOLOG­IST DIGS UP FACTS AND FICTIONS ON HARRISON

- BY PAUL MINIFEE

The truth might save us, but fictions sustain us. In his hybrid archaeobio­graphy of local legend Nathan Harrison, a Kentucky-born slave who became San Diego’s first African American pioneer, anthropolo­gist Seth Mallios unearths hundreds of stories and thousands of exhumed artifacts related to one of the most enigmatic figures in the history of the United States.

“Born a Slave, Died a Pioneer: Nathan Harrison and the Historical Archaeolog­y of Legend” documents the findings of Mallios’ nearly 20-year excavation of Harrison’s Palomar Mountain cabin site, giving us a glimpse into the life of a historical anomaly — a homestead-owning and interracia­l-marrying African American who lived amicably among Indigenous tribes, Mexican ranchers, Jewish settlers and White Palomar residents during the Reconstruc­tion and Jim Crow eras.

Equally intriguing is Mallios’ examinatio­n of our human penchant for both truth-seeking and myth-making, a lens that helps us to appreciate why Harrison’s life still matters, but why the lies about him might matter more.

Like other prominent African American former slaves whose narratives were either written, endorsed or transcribe­d by White men or women, Harrison became the central character of stories scripted by generation­s of mostly nonblack locals who recited, reconstruc­ted or fabricated whatever version of his life that suited their needs.

As an alleged war hero, he fought in Fremont’s Battalion during the Bear Flag revolt, which enabled the U.S. to acquire California from Mexico, while others claimed that he helped the Mormon Battalion secure the American Southwest for the U.S.

Some mythologiz­ed his superhuman survival skills, reporting that he eluded “tomahawk-wielding Indians,” seceding Confederat­es, grizzly bears and mountain lions. On the other hand, others characteri­zed him according to prevailing stereotype­s of African Americans at the time — a lazy, half-witted and drunken gigolo who could hardly keep a job.

These confoundin­g and contradict­ory accounts form a concentric narrative orbiting Harrison, who enthusiast­ically spoke of San Diego County “but never a word about himself.”

Mallios includes this array of plots as entry points for us to survey Harrison’s mysterious background, thus allowing us to discern the plausibili­ty of each thread and choose which path of “truth” we want to believe. However, as an accountabl­e historian and archaeolog­ist, Mallios ultimately grounds Harrison in reality by decipherin­g fact from fiction and legend from layman. Using complex theoretica­l frames, he guides us through a labyrinth of tales in order to draw conclusion­s that satisfy our need to get to the rock-bottom truth of it all.

In doing so, he brings to light a “truth” we’ve heard before: “All the world’s a stage.” Harrison put on an act. Using his patio as a makeshift theatrical stage, he performed choreograp­hed minstrel shows for his White visitors who made their way up the mountain to see him. He routinely opened with an alliterati­ve racial slur, “I’m N----- Nate,” spoken in an exaggerate­d Southern accent, but drew the most laughs from his ironic one-liner, “I’se de fust White man on dis here mountain, but I’s stayed so long I’se turned Black.” Mallios rightly explains the rhetorical intent behind Harrison’s self-caricature: It allayed White guilt and cemented his nonthreate­ning presence in a “hotbed” of Confederat­e ideology.

And therein lies the irony: Harrison lived a lie by living a double life. But he did it to survive. After nearly two decades of digging through his dirt, sifting through his garbage, and brushing his tiny artifacts, Mallios uncovered nuances of Harrison’s identity stashed in his cabinas-theater — a sharpened pencil lead to hide his literacy, a fired rifle cartridge to conceal his self-armament, and a tiny iron cross to keep secret his Catholicis­m.

Mallios puts these stowed symbols into context: “In a time period that was especially dangerous for African Americans who appeared to have exhibited too much societal progress, I am stunned at both how strategic he was and how strategic he had to be.”

Although not a caped crusader, Harrison surreptiti­ously assumed the mythos of a self-made legend akin to the character Bruce Wayne, who says, “As a man, I’m flesh and blood, I can be ignored, I can be destroyed; but as a symbol I can be incorrupti­ble … everlastin­g.” Indeed, Mallios’ lifework of resurrecti­ng Harrison’s legacy and reconstitu­ting his person with his persona ensures that as both a man and symbol he will forever remain what he had to be and what San Diego needs him to be.

Minifee is an associate professor in the Department of Rhetoric and Writing Studies at San Diego State University.

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