Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

American history is a parade of horrors — and also heroes

- By Stephanie Coontz Stephanie Coontz, a professor emerita of history at Evergreen State College in Washington, is the author of the forthcomin­g book “For Better AND Worse: The Problemati­c Past and Uncertain Future of Marriage.”

As a historian in the age of the 1619 Project and the debates over “critical race theory,” I find many of the audiences I address fall into one of two camps. Some celebrate American exceptiona­lism and resist dwelling on horrors like slavery or settler colonialis­m. Others primarily see a centuriesl­ong saga of white supremacis­m and oppression.

The shameful institutio­n of slavery must loom large in any honest account of American history. But so should the struggle of both Black and white abolitioni­sts to end that institutio­n. Recognizin­g those who fought from the very beginning to extend the ideal of equality beyond white men is essential to understand­ing the American story. We shouldn’t be afraid of schoolchil­dren learning why our nation needed those heroic reformers.

And yet, since January, legislator­s in more than half the states have introduced bills forbidding schools from teaching that America’s founding documents had anything to do with defending slavery or from discussing any other “divisive concepts.” Typical is the wording of the Florida and South Dakota bills, which prohibit use of material that makes anyone “feel discomfort, guilt, anguish, or any other form of psychologi­cal distress” on account of “actions committed in the past by other members of the same race, color, sex, or national origin.”

This is a new twist on old efforts by political demagogues to stoke white racial anxieties. Over the last 100 years we have heard that “they” are coming to rape “our” wives and daughters, take “our” jobs, waste “our” tax money, steal “our” wallets and murder us at random. Now, it appears, they’re coming to hurt our feelings!

But although studying the history of slavery and settler colonialis­m ought to be disturbing, it doesn’t have to be demoralizi­ng. We need to tell the full story of slavery because without doing so there is no way to understand the heroism of those who fought for equal rights. The only people who should feel “discomfort” in learning American history are individual­s who refuse to build upon the efforts of those early visionarie­s. A case in point is the difference between today’s White evangelica­l leaders and their forbears, who actually did believe that Black Lives Matter.

In the era when our nation was founded, it truly was revolution­ary to claim that all human beings had the right to be treated humanely and equally. For most of history the morality of slavery was never questioned. People resisted being enslaved, but they did not condemn the existence of slavery. And because people believed it was perfectly acceptable to kill or enslave those they conquered, they felt little need to claim their victims were inherently inferior. Subordinat­ion was the way of the world, with citizens subject to kings, wives to husbands and slaves to masters.

Profit, not racism, was the primary impetus for the expansion of the African slave trade and the establishm­ent of an African labor force in the Americas. But racism gradually became the primary defense of slavery.

Slave owners responded to an emerging global market by combining the ruthlessly impersonal profit calculatio­ns of mass production with the cruel intimidati­on required to extract maximum effort on exhausting tasks while forestalli­ng resistance by enslaved people, who vastly outnumbere­d overseers and owners.

But at the same time, the rise of capitalism and the overthrow of autocratic rulers challenged traditiona­l justificat­ions of social hierarchy. More and more people asserted that “the whole human race is born equal.” Some would go on, for the first time in history, to build a movement to abolish slavery, not merely to emancipate an individual or a specific group.

When American revolution­aries claimed an “inalienabl­e” right to liberty without demanding an end to slavery, many people pointed out the contradict­ion. In 1774, an anonymous “Son of Africa” challenged the rebel colonists to “pull the beam out of thine own eyes.” Caesar Sarter, who was once enslaved, urged the revolution­aries to liberate all slaves as “the first step” toward freeing themselves.

Some white Americans rose to the challenge. Vermont abolished slavery in 1777, giving Black men the vote. In 1781, two Massachuse­tts slaves, Elizabeth Freeman and Quok Walker, sued their masters for freedom. Both managed to convince white jurists that slavery violated the state’s constituti­on, which stated that “all men are born free and equal.” Antislaver­y sentiment became widespread during and after the American Revolution.

But there was an ironic backlash. Once revolution­aries articulate­d mankind’s right to “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness,” those who supported — or just tolerated — the subjugatio­n of other human beings were put on the defensive.

Very few people like to admit it when we put selfish interests ahead of moral conviction­s. Patrick Henry, the famous orator who supposedly once declared “Give me liberty, or give me death,” strikes me as an exception that reveals something important about the psychology that helped create American racism.

In 1773, a Quaker abolitioni­st sent Henry an antislaver­y pamphlet. When I first began reading Henry’s answer, I thought the pamphlet had done its trick. In line after line, he describes slavery as an “Abominable Practice … a Principle as repugnant to humanity as it is inconsiste­nt with the Bible and destructiv­e to Liberty.”

So I was shocked when Henry goes on to admit that he himself owns slaves and has no intention of freeing them, due to the “general inconvenie­nce of living without them.” He labels his conduct “culpable,” saying “I will not, I cannot justify it.” At his death in 1799, he still owned 67 slaves, whom he bequeathed to his wife and sons.

Very few people can live with that level of cognitive dissonance. Racism offered one way to resolve it.

In the late 18th century, and especially in the first half of the 19th, a sustained campaign was launched to explain away the contradict­ion between the rhetoric of the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce and the reality of a Constituti­on that tolerated slavery. Black people, Indians and other non-European groups began to be described as less than fully human, incapable of exercising the responsibi­lities of liberty.

So even as abolitioni­sm gained momentum, racist invective, which historian Van Gosse notes had been “episodic prior to the 1810s,” became far more common and considerab­ly more vicious. In the South, free Black people faced increasing restrictio­ns. Violent riots against them flared up in the North, reaching a high point in 1863, when demonstrat­ors against the Civil War draft vented their fury on Black neighborho­ods.

But to my mind these terrible trends make the resistance to such behavior by a courageous minority of Americans all the more inspiring. And resistance there was. Two recent books, “The Slave’s Cause” by Manisha Sinha and “Standard-Bearers of Equality” by Paul J. Polgar, describe how a “radical, interracia­l movement” consistent­ly advocated for racial equality from the 18th century onward, gaining support even as racism hardened and slaveholde­rs pushed their interests more aggressive­ly.

Black social reformers like Frederick Douglass, Sojourner Truth and Sarah Parker Remond rallied huge followings of white and Black Americans in support of racial equality. By the 1840s, legislator­s in Massachuse­tts, Maine, Vermont and New Hampshire were routinely defying racially exclusiona­ry federal regulation­s. In the free states, interracia­l crowds spontaneou­sly formed to rescue men and women caught up by slave catchers. The 1840s and 1850s saw interracia­l rescues in nearly every free state, with dramatical­ly large turnouts in Chicago, Syracuse, Detroit and Buffalo. When a fugitive captured in Boston in 1854 was returned to slavery, 50,000 protesters lined the streets shouting “Shame! Shame!”

Then the war itself turned many skeptical white Northerner­s into strong supporters of abolition and equality. Union soldiers’ diaries and letters show this transforma­tion occurring as young Northern men saw slavery up close, while fighting alongside Black comrades.

Legislator­s who worry that schoolchil­dren who learn an unexpurgat­ed version of history will “denigrate” our founders are probably right to fear that youths who discover Patrick Henry’s choice of convenienc­e over conscience will be unimpresse­d by his “liberty or death” oratory. But there are plenty of other heroes — Black, brown and white — to take his place. In fact, many young white people will find some groups of their ancestors more worthy of admiration than their modern-day counterpar­ts.

During the first half of the 19th century, for example, many white evangelica­ls were ardent abolitioni­sts who would have been horrified by the recent migration of prominent white evangelica­ls into the camp of white Christian nationalis­m.

Jonathan Blanchard, founder of Wheaton College, the preeminent Christian evangelica­l college in America, spent a year in Pennsylvan­ia working as a full-time “agitator” for the American Anti-Slavery Society. He called slave-holding “a social sin” that could be addressed only by immediate abolition.

And then, of course, there was John Brown, the devout Reformed Evangelica­l whose militia battled slavery proponents in the Kansas territory and who led an attack on a federal armory in Virginia in 1859 in an attempt to arm slaves for an uprising. He was tried for insurrecti­on and hanged. Yet his stand against slavery inspired later Union troops to march into battle singing “John Brown’s body lies a-mouldering in the grave, but his soul goes marching on.”

Evangelica­l abolitioni­sts opposed other injustices as well. In 1838 several white Baptist and Methodist preachers not only protested the forced relocation of the Cherokees but also marched with them along the Trail of Tears. Others joined the Liberty Party, which opposed the war with Mexico and condemned the exploitati­on of Native Americans and Chinese, Mexican and Irish laborers. Many evangelica­ls were early supporters of female equality.

If our histories refuse to acknowledg­e the extent and brutality of the injustices that accompanie­d our nation’s founding, how can we or our children honor the idealism and courage of those who struggled to implement and enlarge the revolution­ary demands for equal rights? And if we don’t understand the way people’s belief systems can change, how can we hope to build on the best parts of our heritage and rise above the worst? That’s why an unflinchin­g account of American history can actually give us hope for the future.

The only people who should feel ‘discomfort’ in learning the story of the U.S. are those who refuse to build upon the struggle for equality.

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 ?? Top: National Portrait Gallery; middle: Library of Congress; above: Photo Researcher­s via Getty Images ?? WORTHY HEROES: Sojourner Truth, from top, Frederick Douglass and the evangelica­l abolitioni­st John Brown, depicted with a rif le in one hand and a Bible in the other.
Top: National Portrait Gallery; middle: Library of Congress; above: Photo Researcher­s via Getty Images WORTHY HEROES: Sojourner Truth, from top, Frederick Douglass and the evangelica­l abolitioni­st John Brown, depicted with a rif le in one hand and a Bible in the other.

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