Entries tagged with “African Burial Ground” from Patell and Waterman's History of New York
The whole interview is worth reading, but especially relevant to this site is the bit about her book New York Burning, a gripping read about the city's purported slave revolt of 1741:
More on the African Burial Ground here.HUMANITIES: In New York Burning, you wrote about ... the fires that swept through Manhattan in 1741.
LEPORE: ... Another long-forgotten episode in early American history. It's a little like Salem witchcraft, which everyone knows about, the 1692 witchcraft trials in which twenty people died, except that what happened in New York was a lot worse. Thirteen black men were burned at the stake; seventeen more were hanged. No one was burned at the stake in Salem. That's just a figment of our collective imagination. What happened in New York was also, historically, far more significant. It played a role in how slavery evolved in the North. And it played a role, I think, in how American politics evolved and how Americans came to tolerate partisanship and the two-party system.
I had wanted to write about this episode for my dissertation but decided against it because, while the prosecutors left behind a rich documentary trail (nearly two hundred black men were arrested and interrogated and many of them were brought to trial), the confessions aren't admissible as historical evidence, since they were confessing to avoid being burned to death and, under those circumstances, who wouldn't lie? I couldn't quite figure out how to deal with that evidentiary problem.
Then, in 1991, workers excavating the foundation for a new federal office building in Manhattan came across the African burial ground from the colonial period. And I thought, 'Oh, this will be incredibly loud, noisy, great historical evidence.' Except it wasn't. The burials and the remains were highly controversial, and the reports were not altogether forthcoming about what scholars ought to conclude from the analysis of those remains. But I wrote the book anyway.
HUMANITIES: In The Name of War [her first book, about "King Philip's War"] you showed how New Englanders described their humiliation and their suffering in language identical to how they described the Indians. In this book you showed pre-Revolutionary Americans describing the restraints on their political liberties in terms so drastic that they actually better describe the bondage in which they keep African slaves and the slaves then referred to as Spanish Negroes. There seems to be this kind of very careful, subtle argument about how we take our enemy's attributes and apply them to ourselves when we think we're in a really bad place.
LEPORE: I'm interested in our capacity to justify acts of tremendous, unspeakable cruelty. It's not obvious, at least not to me. And the way I have always tried to puzzle it out is by thinking mainly about language. What, literally, is the vocabulary of justification?
In eighteenth-century New York, a lot of people want to depose the governor. He is a tyrant. What they write about him, what they write about their right to get rid of him, is, to me, as a citizen, quite moving and inspiring. And yet those same people deploy that very same rhetoric to justify enslaving Africans. How do they manage that? How, honestly, is that possible? I don't know that we have ever really reckoned with that, with what Edmund Morgan called the "American paradox," that our democracy rests, at some level, on the idea of enslavement. It doesn't anymore. But that history matters. And I think we'd be stronger for seeing it more clearly.
HUMANITIES: You also make the argument that slavery is somehow crucial to understanding the development of political parties in America. How does slavery help illuminate the development of political parties?
LEPORE: I tried to make that argument, but I'm not sure it worked. The day that New York Burning was published, Hurricane Katrina touched down in New Orleans. I had a new baby, and I was home with him, and found myself glued to the television. Talking heads would come on--news anchors, commentators--and say, while looking at the footage of nobody but black people on the roofs of those houses, as if shocked, as if this had never occurred to them, 'Oh, my God. Race still exists in this country. There still is racism. Oh, my God. New Orleans is segregated!'
I'm trying to convince people that it matters that black men were burned at the stake in New York City in 1741, and people are surprised that black people are marooned on the roofs of New Orleans in 2005? Here I am, trying to make an argument about eighteenth-century politics, attempting to illustrate, with all manner of exhaustive archival research--charts about the census and the tax lists--and close readings of Blackstone's Commentaries and Restoration drama, trying to argue that the constant, ever-present threat of black conspiracy made white political pluralism possible. Because compared to that, having a two-party system was a piece of cake. And I had to go give some goofy book talks, and I'm thinking, at these bookstores, Sheesh, there's just this huge gap between what I'm trying to say and what people kind of need to know or where we can enter the conversation together, and that's my fault, all mine. What am I doing here in 1741? At the level of imagining our national past and wrestling with the consequences of slavery, the wages of slavery, well, that didn't even begin to happen until the last election where there was a genuine national conversation about what slavery has done to American politics.
HUMANITIES: To go back to the eighteenth century for just a second: So the threat or the partly imagined threat of a slave rebellion, it encouraged people to find a more friendly system of opposition, which was the beginnings of the party system?
LEPORE: History doesn't always work that way, neatly. And when it seems like it works that way, usually someone is being facile. But here's what I argued: In New York in the 1730s there was an extraordinary and unprecedented amount of political opposition, including the founding of an opposition political party. In 1735, a printer named John Peter Zenger was tried for sedition, for publishing a newspaper that opposed the policies of the royally appointed governor. Zenger's trial is one of the most thrilling episodes in early American political history, and it nearly tears the colony apart.
Six years later, an alleged slave conspiracy brings together these two political parties, who, I argue, heal the political divisions between them by burning black men at the stake. And, I think, like decapitating Philip and putting his head on a pike, this is a constitutive moment for a pluralistic politics. It's as if those executions say, 'You and I, we can disagree. We can disagree--a lot--because we are not beyond the limits of our own politics, we are not Indians on the warpath, we are not black men talking about burning the city down.' It's a dark story, I don't like that story, I sometimes wish the past were prettier, but it's how I read the evidence.
Previously.
