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Edited >1 y ago
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Responses: 5
Project done for African-American Culture class
Thank you my friend Maj Marty Hogan for making us aware that August 17 is the anniversary of the birth of African-American anti-slavery activist, poet, and educator Charlotte Louise Bridges Forten Grimke.
Rest in peace Charlotte Louise Bridges Forten Grimke!
Background from pbs.org/onlyateacher/charlotte.html
"Charlotte Forten (1837-1914)
Charlotte Forten was the first northern African-American schoolteacher to go south to teach former slaves. A sensitive and genteel young woman, she brought intense idealism and fierce abolitionist zeal to her work. As a black woman, she hoped to find kinship with the freedmen, though her own education set her apart from the former slaves. She stayed on St. Helena Island for two years, then succumbed to ill health and had to return north. In 1864, she published "Life on the Sea Islands" in The Atlantic Monthly, which brought the work of the Port Royal Experiment to the attention of Northern readers.
Charlotte Forten was born in Philadelphia in 1837 into an influential and affluent family. Her grandfather had been an enormously successful businessman and significant voice in the abolitionist movement. The family moved in the same circles as William Lloyd Garrison and John Greenleaf Whittier: intellectual and political activity were part of the air Charlotte Forten breathed.
She attended Normal School in Salem, Massachusetts and began her teaching career in the Salem schools, the first African-American ever hired. But she longed to be part of a larger cause, and with the coming of the Civil War Forten found a way to act on her deepest beliefs. In 1862, she arrived on St. Helena Island, South Carolina, where she worked with Laura Towne. As she began teaching, she found that many of her pupils spoke only Gullah and were unfamiliar with the routines of school. Though she yearned to feel a bond with the islanders, her temperament, upbringing and education set her apart, and she found she had more in common with the white abolitionists there. Under physical and emotional stress, Forten, who was always frail, grew ill and left St. Helena after two years.
Today, Forten is best remembered for her diaries. From 1854-64 and 1885-92, she recorded the life of an intelligent, cultured, romantic woman who read and wrote poetry, attended lectures, worked, and took part in the largest social movement of her time. She was determined to embody the intellectual potential of all black people. She set a course of philosophical exploration, social sophistication, cultural achievement and spiritual improvement. She was, above all, dedicated to social justice.
In her later life, she lived in Washington D.C. and continued to support equal rights for African-Americans. She married the minister Francis Grimke, nephew of the crusading Grimke sisters. After many years as an invalid, she died in 1914, having been a voice for equality throughout her life.
In Her Own Words
"Monday, October 23, 1854: I will spare no effort to prepare myself well for the responsible duties of a teacher, and to live for the good I can do my oppressed and suffering fellow creatures." -- Diary entry
"Sunday, January 18, 1856: But oh, how inexpressibly bitter and agonizing it is to feel oneself an outcast from the rest of mankind, as we are in this country! To me it is dreadful, dreadful. Oh, that I could de much towards bettering our condition. I will do all, all the very little that lies in my power, while life and strength last!" -- Diary entry
"Wednesday, November 5, 1862: Had my first regular teaching experience, and to you and you only friend beloved, will I acknowledge that it was not a very pleasant one." -- Diary entry
"Thursday, November 13, 1862: Talked to the children a little while to-day about the noble Toussaint [L'Ouverture]. They listened very attentively. It is well that they should know what one of their own color could do for his race. I long to inspire them with courage and ambition (of a noble sort), and high purpose." -- Diary entry
"The first day of school was rather trying. Most of my children are very small, and consequently restless. But after some days of positive, though not severe, treatment, order was brought out of chaos. I never before saw children so eager to learn." -- Life on the Sea Islands
"The long, dark night of the Past, with all its sorrows and its fears, was forgotten; and for the Future -- the eyes of these freed children see no clouds in it. It is full of sunlight, they think, and they trust in it, perfectly." -- Life on the Sea Islands
"I shall dwell again among 'mine own people.'" I shall gather my scholars about me, and see smiles of greeting break over their dusky faces. My heart sings a song of thanksgiving, at the thought that even I am permitted to do something for a long-abused race, and aid in promoting a higher, holier, and happier life on the Sea Islands." -- Life on the Sea Islands
Scholars on Charlotte Forten
Nancy Hoffman
Charlotte Forten in some ways is the tragic figure of the story of the women who went south. Her diary revealed she had been touched by racism and by a kind of romanticism that came from reading widely from European literature. She went south expecting to find herself in a community that would welcome her and feel very familiar. To her great surprise, she discovered she had more in common with white, educated women in the South than she had to freed slaves, who certainly had not been schooled in European romantics.
I think the mission of Charlotte Forten and of Laura Towne really fortified them in the very difficult challenging situations: sometimes they were in physical danger, their health was in danger, sometimes they were the butts of white racism.
I think these women were able to separate their private hardships from this great public mission that they were carrying out, which in a sense was their way of serving democracy, serving their nation. Charlotte Forten certainly had in her public writing a voice she adopted for public purposes, and then I think she spoke to herself in her private diaries.
Jacqueline Jones
The great scholar W.E.B. DuBois called the teachers saintly souls, and he believed that they really did provide a tremendous amount of assistance for the freed people after the war. He was one of the first scholars to really highlight the contributions of the teachers and I think give them their due in a certain way.
Wilbur Cash, the southern journalist and writer, decried the schoolteachers. He said they were meddlesome busybodies; they were horsefaced bespectacled old women who went where they had no business going and inflamed the passions of Southern whites in the process. He felt the teachers' actions were terribly misguided and he condemned them in his book, The Mind of the South.
I tend to see the teachers in a more complex way: they were neither saintly souls, nor were they meddlesome busybodies. But, in fact, they were ordinary young women who felt strongly that they wanted to have a role in the great drama that was the Civil War. They wanted to contribute what they could to black men and women. They did not always understand the culture that they had entered in the South, but at the same time, they were really exceptional for their day.
Further Reading
Forten, Charlotte.
Journal, 1953
Life on the Sea Islands in Two Black Teachers During the Civil War; Series: The American Negro, His History and Literature, 1969
Hoffman, Nancy. Woman's True Profession: Voices from the History of Teaching, 1981"
Charlotte Forten Grimke
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d53CDuUjaXM
FYI Maj William W. "Bill" Price Capt Seid Waddell Capt Tom Brown 1stSgt Eugene Harless CW5 John M. MSG Andrew White SFC William Farrell SSG James J. Palmer IV aka "JP4"SCPO Morris Ramsey SGT Michael Thorin SGT (Join to see) SGT Robert George SGT John " Mac " McConnell SP5 Mark Kuzinski SP5 Robert Ruck SPC Margaret Higgins Maj Marty Hogan SFC Joe S. Davis Jr., MSM, DSL SSgt Brian Brakke
Rest in peace Charlotte Louise Bridges Forten Grimke!
Background from pbs.org/onlyateacher/charlotte.html
"Charlotte Forten (1837-1914)
Charlotte Forten was the first northern African-American schoolteacher to go south to teach former slaves. A sensitive and genteel young woman, she brought intense idealism and fierce abolitionist zeal to her work. As a black woman, she hoped to find kinship with the freedmen, though her own education set her apart from the former slaves. She stayed on St. Helena Island for two years, then succumbed to ill health and had to return north. In 1864, she published "Life on the Sea Islands" in The Atlantic Monthly, which brought the work of the Port Royal Experiment to the attention of Northern readers.
Charlotte Forten was born in Philadelphia in 1837 into an influential and affluent family. Her grandfather had been an enormously successful businessman and significant voice in the abolitionist movement. The family moved in the same circles as William Lloyd Garrison and John Greenleaf Whittier: intellectual and political activity were part of the air Charlotte Forten breathed.
She attended Normal School in Salem, Massachusetts and began her teaching career in the Salem schools, the first African-American ever hired. But she longed to be part of a larger cause, and with the coming of the Civil War Forten found a way to act on her deepest beliefs. In 1862, she arrived on St. Helena Island, South Carolina, where she worked with Laura Towne. As she began teaching, she found that many of her pupils spoke only Gullah and were unfamiliar with the routines of school. Though she yearned to feel a bond with the islanders, her temperament, upbringing and education set her apart, and she found she had more in common with the white abolitionists there. Under physical and emotional stress, Forten, who was always frail, grew ill and left St. Helena after two years.
Today, Forten is best remembered for her diaries. From 1854-64 and 1885-92, she recorded the life of an intelligent, cultured, romantic woman who read and wrote poetry, attended lectures, worked, and took part in the largest social movement of her time. She was determined to embody the intellectual potential of all black people. She set a course of philosophical exploration, social sophistication, cultural achievement and spiritual improvement. She was, above all, dedicated to social justice.
In her later life, she lived in Washington D.C. and continued to support equal rights for African-Americans. She married the minister Francis Grimke, nephew of the crusading Grimke sisters. After many years as an invalid, she died in 1914, having been a voice for equality throughout her life.
In Her Own Words
"Monday, October 23, 1854: I will spare no effort to prepare myself well for the responsible duties of a teacher, and to live for the good I can do my oppressed and suffering fellow creatures." -- Diary entry
"Sunday, January 18, 1856: But oh, how inexpressibly bitter and agonizing it is to feel oneself an outcast from the rest of mankind, as we are in this country! To me it is dreadful, dreadful. Oh, that I could de much towards bettering our condition. I will do all, all the very little that lies in my power, while life and strength last!" -- Diary entry
"Wednesday, November 5, 1862: Had my first regular teaching experience, and to you and you only friend beloved, will I acknowledge that it was not a very pleasant one." -- Diary entry
"Thursday, November 13, 1862: Talked to the children a little while to-day about the noble Toussaint [L'Ouverture]. They listened very attentively. It is well that they should know what one of their own color could do for his race. I long to inspire them with courage and ambition (of a noble sort), and high purpose." -- Diary entry
"The first day of school was rather trying. Most of my children are very small, and consequently restless. But after some days of positive, though not severe, treatment, order was brought out of chaos. I never before saw children so eager to learn." -- Life on the Sea Islands
"The long, dark night of the Past, with all its sorrows and its fears, was forgotten; and for the Future -- the eyes of these freed children see no clouds in it. It is full of sunlight, they think, and they trust in it, perfectly." -- Life on the Sea Islands
"I shall dwell again among 'mine own people.'" I shall gather my scholars about me, and see smiles of greeting break over their dusky faces. My heart sings a song of thanksgiving, at the thought that even I am permitted to do something for a long-abused race, and aid in promoting a higher, holier, and happier life on the Sea Islands." -- Life on the Sea Islands
Scholars on Charlotte Forten
Nancy Hoffman
Charlotte Forten in some ways is the tragic figure of the story of the women who went south. Her diary revealed she had been touched by racism and by a kind of romanticism that came from reading widely from European literature. She went south expecting to find herself in a community that would welcome her and feel very familiar. To her great surprise, she discovered she had more in common with white, educated women in the South than she had to freed slaves, who certainly had not been schooled in European romantics.
I think the mission of Charlotte Forten and of Laura Towne really fortified them in the very difficult challenging situations: sometimes they were in physical danger, their health was in danger, sometimes they were the butts of white racism.
I think these women were able to separate their private hardships from this great public mission that they were carrying out, which in a sense was their way of serving democracy, serving their nation. Charlotte Forten certainly had in her public writing a voice she adopted for public purposes, and then I think she spoke to herself in her private diaries.
Jacqueline Jones
The great scholar W.E.B. DuBois called the teachers saintly souls, and he believed that they really did provide a tremendous amount of assistance for the freed people after the war. He was one of the first scholars to really highlight the contributions of the teachers and I think give them their due in a certain way.
Wilbur Cash, the southern journalist and writer, decried the schoolteachers. He said they were meddlesome busybodies; they were horsefaced bespectacled old women who went where they had no business going and inflamed the passions of Southern whites in the process. He felt the teachers' actions were terribly misguided and he condemned them in his book, The Mind of the South.
I tend to see the teachers in a more complex way: they were neither saintly souls, nor were they meddlesome busybodies. But, in fact, they were ordinary young women who felt strongly that they wanted to have a role in the great drama that was the Civil War. They wanted to contribute what they could to black men and women. They did not always understand the culture that they had entered in the South, but at the same time, they were really exceptional for their day.
Further Reading
Forten, Charlotte.
Journal, 1953
Life on the Sea Islands in Two Black Teachers During the Civil War; Series: The American Negro, His History and Literature, 1969
Hoffman, Nancy. Woman's True Profession: Voices from the History of Teaching, 1981"
Charlotte Forten Grimke
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d53CDuUjaXM
FYI Maj William W. "Bill" Price Capt Seid Waddell Capt Tom Brown 1stSgt Eugene Harless CW5 John M. MSG Andrew White SFC William Farrell SSG James J. Palmer IV aka "JP4"SCPO Morris Ramsey SGT Michael Thorin SGT (Join to see) SGT Robert George SGT John " Mac " McConnell SP5 Mark Kuzinski SP5 Robert Ruck SPC Margaret Higgins Maj Marty Hogan SFC Joe S. Davis Jr., MSM, DSL SSgt Brian Brakke
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SSgt Boyd Herrst
I knew there were others.. but didn’t take time to search for them..
Thanks to RP bud AF Captain Marty
Hogan for making us aware of her presence and her Birthday. I had a busy day y’day Assisting V.F.W. Member’s and some non-members
With their veteran concerns.. and signed a few non-members when seeing their eligibility on their DD-214 or DD215.. After a filling day of that and returning home to catch up on RP that eve and the next day..
makes for another fun-filled day.. We assist our service advocate as much as possible.. she’s also Post
Adjutant.. She just finished being Post Commander this Past June... Doing Service advocate is not hard.. only as hard as one makes it.
We got a guide sheet from Department and added good stuff
(Where else to look, who else we can call to open more doors..)..
So we just follow the points and check them off as we go... when we are not finished we copy the points sheet and insert in file so we can continue later assisting that Vet or family member .. Had not had any frauds.. (someone calls to get scoop on a Vet to use for fraudulent purpose(s).). A little further than I needed to go.. when we can make people aware of what we do, no matter who they are.. There are those that are not aware and some who think we just warm a stool or chair in the canteen .. between marching in parades and going to
The Various meetings and get -togethers (some pool us like Killary does.. as deplorables). One year for a parade, a member of my former post worked on a hay wagon and put rails on it and places for chairs so they wouldn’t slide and a canopy.. Parade committee safety person<~(seriously?)didn’t approve it, said it needed walls and windows and seatbelts. Guy was a member of a baptist pacifist group..
Well we can play this game .. We had a few members who got kinda busy and made it impossible for him to get to the parade in time to check all the floats and participants.. to make sure they adhered to parade rules..!so we got our parade number(right behind our Honor Guard. And in front of the horses and other farm animals that were walking.. All the military units got their rightful places at the front of the parade.. There were no politicians.. No politics/ campaigning.. .. it wasn’t an election year anyway..that’s year.
What was funny was after the parade was over and we were at the Host Post for the festivities a bumper sticker for a politician was stuck to the back of the wagon just under the license plate.. We determined it wasn’t posted until after the parade.. some person claimed it was there before we started.. well too late if it was...
a member said we should post a retraction in the paper.. how about we don’t until enough people complain, ... what if it was a late stunt?... so we waited.. nobody complained.. not even who may have been guilty... so.. no retraction forthcoming...
Thanks to RP bud AF Captain Marty
Hogan for making us aware of her presence and her Birthday. I had a busy day y’day Assisting V.F.W. Member’s and some non-members
With their veteran concerns.. and signed a few non-members when seeing their eligibility on their DD-214 or DD215.. After a filling day of that and returning home to catch up on RP that eve and the next day..
makes for another fun-filled day.. We assist our service advocate as much as possible.. she’s also Post
Adjutant.. She just finished being Post Commander this Past June... Doing Service advocate is not hard.. only as hard as one makes it.
We got a guide sheet from Department and added good stuff
(Where else to look, who else we can call to open more doors..)..
So we just follow the points and check them off as we go... when we are not finished we copy the points sheet and insert in file so we can continue later assisting that Vet or family member .. Had not had any frauds.. (someone calls to get scoop on a Vet to use for fraudulent purpose(s).). A little further than I needed to go.. when we can make people aware of what we do, no matter who they are.. There are those that are not aware and some who think we just warm a stool or chair in the canteen .. between marching in parades and going to
The Various meetings and get -togethers (some pool us like Killary does.. as deplorables). One year for a parade, a member of my former post worked on a hay wagon and put rails on it and places for chairs so they wouldn’t slide and a canopy.. Parade committee safety person<~(seriously?)didn’t approve it, said it needed walls and windows and seatbelts. Guy was a member of a baptist pacifist group..
Well we can play this game .. We had a few members who got kinda busy and made it impossible for him to get to the parade in time to check all the floats and participants.. to make sure they adhered to parade rules..!so we got our parade number(right behind our Honor Guard. And in front of the horses and other farm animals that were walking.. All the military units got their rightful places at the front of the parade.. There were no politicians.. No politics/ campaigning.. .. it wasn’t an election year anyway..that’s year.
What was funny was after the parade was over and we were at the Host Post for the festivities a bumper sticker for a politician was stuck to the back of the wagon just under the license plate.. We determined it wasn’t posted until after the parade.. some person claimed it was there before we started.. well too late if it was...
a member said we should post a retraction in the paper.. how about we don’t until enough people complain, ... what if it was a late stunt?... so we waited.. nobody complained.. not even who may have been guilty... so.. no retraction forthcoming...
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SFC Dagmar Riley
I think so too! It was difficult enough during that time to be a woman and it really must’ve been extraordinarily difficult to be black on top of that too.
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