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Overview

A new historical anthology from transatlantic slavery to the Reconstruction curated by the Schomburg Center, that makes the case for focusing on the histories of Black people as agents and architects of their own lives and ultimate liberation, with a foreword by Kevin Young

This is the first Penguin Classics anthology published in partnership with the Schomburg Center, a world-renowned cultural institution documenting black life in America and worldwide. A historic branch of NYPL located in Harlem, the Schomburg holds one of the world's premiere collections of slavery material within the Lapidus Center for Historical Analysis of Transatlantic Slavery. Unsung will place well-known documents by abolitionists alongside lesser-known life stories and overlooked or previously uncelebrated accounts of the everyday lives and activism that were central in the slavery era, but that are mostly excised from today's master accounts. Unsung will also highlight related titles from founder Arturo Schomburg's initial collection: rare histories and first-person narratives about slavery that assisted his generation in understanding the roots of their contemporary social struggles. Unsung will draw from the Schomburg's rich holdings in order to lead a dynamic discussion of slavery, rebellion, resistance, and anti-slavery protest in the United States.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780143136088
Publisher: Penguin Publishing Group
Publication date: 02/16/2021
Pages: 656
Sales rank: 1,075,163
Product dimensions: 5.00(w) x 7.50(h) x 1.20(d)

About the Author

Michelle Commander is Associate Director and Curator of the Lapidus Center.

Kevin Young is Director of the Schomburg Center and Poetry Editor for the New Yorker. His most recent book of poetry, Brown, and his nonfiction book Bunk, were both named New York Times Notable Books and longlisted for the National Book Award. Bunk was also a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award.

Read an Excerpt

Daniel Horsmanden

 

In 1741, the British colony of New York was at the height of panic. Fires had raged throughout Manhattan for several weeks, leading lawmakers to question whether depraved members of the enslaved community, recently arrived immigrants, or other agitators were in their midst. In what was eventually deemed to be a certain "Negro plot" in which enslaved people sought vengeance for their condition, authorities rounded up, jailed, and tried two hundred enslaved people and ten white men who were the suspected architects of the terror. Nearly half of the enslaved people were found guilty and either hanged, exiled to plantations outside America, or burned at the stake. Others were summarily tossed into a dungeon beneath city hall, where they were intimidated into "confessing" to their crimes and asked to implicate others in the alleged scheme to burn down the city. Four white defendants were hanged and seven others were pardoned and banned from ever stepping foot in New York. Daniel Horsmanden (1691-1778), the judge who was appointed to investigate the fires and a possibly related robbery, compiled the testimonies, evidence, and a thorough list of those found guilty within this document. It remains unclear whether the "guilty" parties were truly culpable. What is certain is that stories of Black rebellion across the Atlantic World were persistent and increased white paranoia. Enslavers responded to real and imagined conspiracies in increasingly violent ways, as they realized that their prior efforts to tamp down resistance had been futile. Indeed, rebellious enslaved people would go on to fight for their dignity and often attempted to self-liberate, refusing to be held in the bonds of slavery forever.

 

From The New-York Conspiracy;

or, A History of the Negro Plot,

with the Journal of the Proceedings Against the Conspirators at

New York in the Years 1741-2

(1810)

 

"Gentlemen of the grand jury,

 

"It is not without some concern, that I am obliged at this time to be more particular in your charge, than for many preceding terms there hath been occasion. The many frights and terrors which the good people of this city have of late been put into, by repeated and unusual fires, and burning of houses, give us too much room to suspect, that some of them at least, did not proceed from mere chance, or common accidents; but on the contrary, from the premeditated malice and wicked purposes of evil 36 and designing persons; and therefore, it greatly behoves us to use our utmost diligence, by all lawful ways and means, to discover the contrivers and perpetrators of such daring and flagitious undertakings: that, upon conviction, they may receive condign punishment; for although we have the happiness of living under a government which exceeds all others in the excellency of its constitution and laws, yet if those to whom the execution of them (which my lord Coke calls the life and soul of the law) is committed, do not exert themselves in a conscientious discharge of their respective duties, such laws which were intended for a terror to the evil-doer, and a protection to the good, will become a dead letter, and our most excellent constitution turned into anarchy and confusion; every one practising what he listeth, and doing what shall seem good in his own eyes: to prevent which, it is the duty of all grand juries to inquire into the conduct and behaviour of the people in their respective counties; and if, upon examination, they find any to have transgressed the laws of the land, to present them, that so they may by the court be put upon their trial, and then either to be discharged or punished according to their demerits.

 

"I am told there are several prisoners now in jail, who have been committed by the city magistrates, upon suspicion of having been concerned in some of the late fires; and others, who under pretence of assisting the unhappy sufferers, by saving their goods from the flames, for stealing, or receiving them. This indeed, is adding affliction to the afflicted, and is a very great aggravation of such crime, and therefore deserves a narrow inquiry: that so the exemplary punishment of the guilty (if any such should be so found) may deter others from committing the like villainies; for this kind of stealing, I think, has not been often practised among us.

 

"Gentlemen,

 

"Arson, or the malicious and voluntary burning, not only a mansion house, but also any other house, and the out buildings, or barns, and stables adjoining thereto, by night or by day, is felony at common law; and if any part of house be burned, the offender is guilty of felony, notwithstanding the fire afterwards be put out, or go out of itself.

 

"This crime is of so shocking a nature, that if we have any in this city, who, having been guilty thereof, should escape, who can say he is safe, or tell where it will end?

 

"Gentlemen,

 

"Another Thing which I cannot omit recommending to your 37 serious and diligent inquiry, is to find out and present all such persons who sell rum, and other strong liquor to negroes. It must be obvious to every one, that there are too many of them in this city; who, under pretence of selling what they call a penny dram to a negro, will sell to him as many quarts or gallons of rum, as he can steal money or goods to pay for.

 

"How this notion of its being lawful to sell a penny dram, or a pennyworth of rum to a slave, without the consent or direction of his master, has prevailed, I know not; but this I am sure of, that there is not only no such law, but that the doing of it is directly contrary to an act of assembly now in force, for the better regulating of slaves. The many fatal consequences flowing from this prevailing and wicked practice, are so notorious, and so nearly concern us all, that one would be almost surprised, to think there should be a necessity for a court to recommend a suppressing of such pernicious houses: thus much in particular; now in general.

 

"My charge, gentlemen, further is, to present all conspiracies, combinations, and other offences, from treasons down to trespasses; and in your inquiries, the oath you, and each of you have just now taken, will, I am persuaded, be your guide, and I pray God to direct and assist you in the discharge of your duty."

 

Court adjourned until to-morrow morning ten o'clock.

 

SUPREME COURT.

 

Wednesday, April 22.

 

Present, the second justice. The court opened, and adjourned until ten o'clock to-morrow morning.

 

The grand jury having been informed, that Mary Burton could give them some account concerning the goods stolen from Mr. Hogg's, sent for her this morning, and ordered she should be sworn; the constable returned and acquainted them, that she said she would not be sworn, nor give evidence; whereupon they ordered the constable to get a warrant from a magistrate, to bring her before them. The constable was some time gone, but at length returned, and brought her with him; and being asked why she would not be sworn, and give her evidence? she told the grand jury she would not be sworn; and seemed to be under some great uneasiness, or terrible apprehensions; which gave suspicion that she knew something concerning the fires that had lately happened: and being asked a question to that purpose, she gave no answer; which increased the jealousy that she was privy to them; and as it was thought a matter of the utmost concern, the grand jury was very importunate, and used many arguments with her, in public and private, to persuade her to speak the truth, and tell all she knew about it. To this end, the lieutenant governor's proclamation was read to her, promising indemnity, and the reward of one hundred pounds to any person, confederate or not, who should make discovery, &c. She seemed to despise it, nor could the grand jury by any means, either threats or promises, prevail upon her, though they assured her withal, that she should have the protection of the magistrates, and her person be safe and secure from harm; but hitherto all was in vain: therefore the grand jury desired alderman Bancker to commit her; and the constable was charged with her accordingly; but before he had got her to jail, she considered better of it, and resolved to be sworn, and give her evidence in the afternoon.

 

Accordingly, she being sworn, came before the grand jury; but as they were proceeding to her examination, and before they asked her any questions, she told them she would acquaint them with what she knew relating to the goods stolen from Mr. Hogg's, but would say nothing about the fires.

 

This expression thus, as it were providentially, slipping from the evidence, much alarmed the grand jury; for, as they naturally concluded, it did by construction amount to an affirmative, that she could give an account of the occasion of the several fires; and therefore, as it highly became those gentlemen in the discharge of their trust, they determined to use their utmost diligence to sift out the discovery, but still she remained inflexible, till at length, having recourse to religious topics, representing to her the heiniousness of the crime which she would be guilty of, if she was privy to, and could discover so wicked a design, as the firing houses about our ears; where by not only people's estates would be destroyed, but many persons might lose their lives in the flames: this she would have to answer for at the day of judgment, as much as any person immediately concerned, because she might have prevented this destruction, and would not; so that a most damnable sin would lie at her door; and what need she fear from her divulging it; she was sure of the protection of the magistrates? or the grand jury expressed themselves in words to the same purpose; which arguments at 39 last prevailed, and she gave the following evidence, which however, notwithstanding what bad been said, came from her, as if still under some terrible apprehensions or restraints.

 

Deposition, No. 1.-Mary Burton, being sworn, deposeth,

 

1. "That Princeand C¾sarbrought the things of which they had robbed Mr. Hogg, to her master, John Hughson's house, and that they were handed in through the window, Hughson, his wife, and Peggy receiving them, about two or three o'clock on a Sunday morning.

 

Mr. Auboyneau's negro.

 

Vaarck's negro.

 

2. "That C¾sar, prince, and Mr. Philipse's negro man (Cuffee) used to meet frequently at her master's house, and that she had heard them (the negroes) talk frequently of burning the fort; and that they would go down to the fly

 

and burn the whole town; and that her master and mistress said, they would aid and assist them as much as they could.

 

3. "That in their common conversation they used to say, that when all this was done, C¾sar should be governor, and Hughson, her master, should be king.

 

4. "That Cuffee used to say, that a great many people had too much, and others too little; that his old master had a great deal of money, but that, in a short time, he should have less, and that he (Cuffee) should have more.

 

5. "That at the same time when the things of which Mr. Hogg was robbed, were brought to her master's house, they brought some indigo and bees wax, which was likewise received by her master and mistress.

 

6. "That at the meetings of the three aforesaid negroes, C¾sar Prince, and Cuffee, at her master's house, they used to say, in their conversation, that when they set fire to the town, they would do it in the night, and as the white people came to extinguish it, they would kill and destroy them.

 

7. "That she has known at times, seven or eight guns in her master's house, and some swords, and that she has seen twenty or thirty negroes at one time in her master's house; and that at such large meetings, the three aforesaid negroes, Cuffee, Prince, and C¾sar, were generally present, and most active, and that they used to say, that the other negroes durst not refuse to do what they commanded them, and they were sure that they had a number sufficient to stand by them.

 

8. "That Hughson (her master) and her mistress used to threaten, that if she, the deponent, ever made mention of the 40 goods stolen from Mr. Hogg, they would poison her; and the negroes swore, if ever she published, or discovered the design of burning the town, they would burn her whenever they met her.

 

9. "That she never saw any white person in company when they talked of burning the town, but her master, her mistress, and Peggy."

 

This evidence of a conspiracy, not only to burn the city, but also destroy and murder the people, was most astonishing to the grand jury, and that any white people should become so abandoned as to confederate with slaves in such an execrable and detestable purpose, could not but be very amazing to every one that heard it; what could scarce be credited; but that the several fires had been occasioned by some combination of villains, was, at the time of them, naturally to be collected from the manner and circumstances attending them.

 

The grand jury therefore, as it was a matter of the utmost consequence, thought it necessary to inform the judges concerning it, in order that the most effectual measures might be concerted, for discovering the confederates; and the judges were acquainted with it accordingly.

 

SUPREME COURT.

 

Thursday, April 23.

 

Present, the second and third justices.

 

The grand jury came into court and were called over.

 

The foreman desiring that Margaret Sorubiero, alias Kerry, a prisoner might be brought before them, Ordered, that the sheriff do carry the said Margaret Sorubiero, alias Kerry, before the grand jury, and see her safe returned again.

 

The court adjourned until to-morrow morning, ten o'clock.

 

This morning the judges summoned all the gentlemen of the law in town, to meet them in the afternoon, in order to consult with them, and determine upon such measures as on the result of their deliberations should be judged most proper to be taken upon this emergency; and Mr. Murray, Mr. Alexander, Mr. Smith, Mr. Chambers, Mr. Nicholls, Mr. Lodge, and Mr. Jamison, met them accordingly; the attorney general being indisposed, could not attend.

 

It was considered, that though there was an act of the province for trying negroes, as in other colonies, for all manner of offences by the justices, &c. in a summary way; yet as this was a scheme of villainy in which white people were confederated with them, and most probably were the first movers and seducers of the slaves; from the nature of such a conjunction, there was reason to apprehend there was a conspiracy of deeper design and more dangerous contrivance than the slaves themselves were capable of; it was thought a matter that required great secrecy, as well as the utmost diligence, in the conduct of the inquiry concerning it: and upon the whole, it was judged most adviseable, as there was an absolute necessity that a matter of this nature and consequence should be fathomed as soon as possible, that it should be taken under the care of the supreme court; and for that purpose, that application should be made to his honour the lieutenant governor, for an ordinance to enlarge the term for the sitting of that court, which in the ordinary method would determinate on the Tuesday following.

Table of Contents

Foreword Kevin Young xi

Introduction Michelle D. Commander xvii

Suggestions for Further Reading xxvii

Unsung: Accounts of Slave Rebellion and Insurrection

From The New-York Conspiracy; or, A History of the Negro Plot, with the Journal of the Proceedings Against the Conspirators at New York in the Years 1741-2 (1810) Daniel Horsmanden 3

From Negro Plot: An Account of the Late Intended Insurrection Among a Portion of the Blacks of This City (1822) 18

From Nat Turner's Insurrection (1861) Thomas Wentworth Higginson 32

From A Voice from Harper's Ferry (1861) Osborne P. Anderson 51

Black Abolitionist Voices

From Walker's Appeal, in Four Articles; Together with a Preamble, to the Coloured Citizens of the World, but in Particular, and Very Expressly, to Those of the United States of America (1829) David Walker 67

"Anti-Slavery Speech Before the Female Literary Society of Philadelphia," The Liberator (1832) Sarah Mapps Douglass 85

From Productions of Mrs. Maria W. Stewart Presented to the First African Baptist Church & Society, of the City of Boston (1835) Maria Stewart 88

"An Address Delivered Before the Ladies' Anti-Slavery Society of Philadelphia, on the Evening of the 14th of April, 1836" (1836) James Forten Jr. 102

"A Plea for the Oppressed" (1850) Lucy Stanton 116

From A Plea for Emigration; or, Notes of Canada West (1852) Mary Ann Shadd Cary 120

From The Condition, Elevation, Emigration, and Destiny of the Colored People of the United States, Politically Considered (1852) Martin Robison Delany 134

From The Reasonableness of the Abolition of Slavery at the South, a Legitimate Inference from the Success of British Emancipation. An Address, Delivered at Hartford, Connecticut, on the First of August, 1856 (1856) James W. C. Pennington 150

Selections from the Anglo-African Magazine (January 1860) 161

"I Do Not Believe in the Antislavery of Abraham Lincoln," The Liberator (1860) H. Ford Douglas 174

Narratives of Slavery and Fugitive Escapes

From A Narrative of the Most Remarkable Particulars in the Life of James Albert Ukawsaw Gronniosaw, an African Prince, as Related by Himself (1772) James Albert Ukawsaw Gronniosaw 187

From Narrative of Henry Box Brown, Who Escaped from Slavery Enclosed in a Box 3 Feet Long and 2 Feet Wide (1849) Henry Brown 201

From A North-Side View of Slavery. The Refugee; or, The Narratives of Fugitive Slaves in Canada, Related by Themselves (1856) Benjamin Drew 213

From Experience and Personal Narrative of Uncle Tom Jones; Who Was for Forty Years a Slave. Also the Surprising Adventures of Wild Tom, of the Island Retreat, a Fugitive Negro from South Carolina (c. 1850s) Thomas H. Jones 227

From A Hairdresser's Experience in High Life (1859) Eliza Potter 248

From Fifty Years in Chains; or, The Life of an American Slave (I860) Charles Ball 257

From Running a Thousand Miles for Freedom; or, The Escape of William and Ellen Craft from Slavery (1860) William Craft 267

From Louisa Picquet, the Octoroon; or, Inside Views of Southern Domestic Life (1861) Hiram Mattison 278

From The Story of the Life of John Anderson, the Fugitive Slave (1863) Harper Twelvetrees 292

From Behind the Scenes; or, Thirty Years a Slave, and Four Years in the White House (1868) Elizabeth Keckley 302

Selections from The Underground Railroad (1872) William Still 309

From My Life in the South (1885) Jacob Stroyer 336

From The Narrative of Bethany Veney, a Slave Woman (1889) Bethany Veney 345

From The House of Bondage; or, Charlotte Brooks and Other Slaves (1891) Octavia V. Rogers Albert 359

From The New Man: Twenty-Nine Years a Slave, Twenty-Nine Years a Free Man (1895) Henry Clay Bruce 369

Antislavery Poetics, Children's Literature, and Drama

Poetry and Music

"An Address to the Negroes in the State of New York" (1787); An Evening's Improvement, Shewing the Necessity of Beholding the Lamb of God. To Which Is Added a Dialogue Entitled "The Kind Master and Dutiful Servant" (1790); and "An Essay on Slavery, with Justification to Divine Providence, That God Rules over All Things" (1786) Jupiter Hammon 379

"On Liberty and Slavery," in Poems by a Slave (1837) George Horton 401

Selections from Poems Written During the Progress of the Abolition Question in the United States, Between the Years 1830 and 1838 (1837) John Greenleaf Whittier 406

Selections from Freedom's Lyre; or, Psalms, Hymns, and Sacred Songs for the Slave and His Friends (1840) Edwin F. Hatfield 416

Selections from The Anti-Slavery Harp: A Collection of Songs for Anti-Slavery Meetings (1849) William Wells Brown 424

Selections from Poems on Miscellaneous Subjects (1857) Frances Ellen Watkins Harper 432

Children's Literature

From The American Anti-Slavery Almanac for 1837's "Children's Department" (1837) 437

From The Liberty Cap (1846) Eliza Lee Follen 443

From The Anti-Slavery Alphabet (1847) Hannah Townsend Mary Townsend 446

From The Young Abolitionists; or, Conversations on Slavery (1848) Jane Elizabeth Jones 453

From Minnie May; with Other Rhymes and Stories (1856) Kate Barclay 460

From The Child's Anti-Slavery Book: Containing a Few Words About American Slave Children and Stories of Slave-Life (1859) Anonymous Julia Colman Matilda G. Thompson 467

From Cain and Patsy; the Gospel Preached to the Poor. A Story of Slave Life (1860) (Mrs.) J. D. Chaplin 477

From Watch and Wait; or, The Young Fugitives, a Story for Young People (1864) Oliver Optic 482

Drama

From The Escape; or, A Leap for Freedom (1858) William Wells Brown 493

From Peculiar Sam; or, The Underground Railroad (1878) Pauline Elizabeth Hopkins 518

The Dawn of Freedom

From "The Mission of the War" (1864) Frederick Douglass 543

From Life on the Sea Islands (1864) Charlotte Forten 555

From Reminiscences of My Life in Camp with the 33d United States Colored Troops Late 1st S.C. Volunteers (1902) Susie King Taylor 568

"We Are All Bound Up Together" (1866) Frances Ellen Watkins Harper 580

"I Claim the Rights of a Man" (1868) Henry McNeal Turner 584

From "All We Ask Is Equal Laws, Equal Legislation, and Equal Rights" (1874) Congressman Richard Harvey Cain 594

"I Am an Anarchist" (1886) Lucy E. Parsons 605

Lost Friends Advertisements from the Southwestern Christian Advocate (1880s-1890s) 610

Bibliography 619

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