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if there weren’t enough controversy during the campaign between Democratic
presidential hopefuls Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama,an unlikely firestorm
erupted in February, when historical icon Harriet Tubman was pulled into the
fray.
It all started when feminist political analyst Robin Morgan updated her infamous
1970 essay “Goodbye to All That” to castigate the racist and sexist divisions in
the campaign, particularly as hurled against Clinton. In response to the failure
of some women to support Clinton (and by implication, failure to be liberated),
Morgan wrote: “Let a statement by the magnificent Harriet Tubman stand as reply.
When asked how she managed to save hundreds of enslaved African Americans via
the Underground Railroad during the Civil War, she replied bitterly, ‘I could
have saved thousands—if only I’d been able to convince them they were slaves.’”
Within days, the validity of the quote was called into question by Ralph Luker
of the History News Network, who contacted scholars who have researched
Tubman—including Milton Sernett, professor emeritus of history at the Maxwell
School (and African American studies at SU). Sernett is the author of the
recently published Harriet Tubman: Myth, Memory, and History.
None could trace the quote to primary sources.
“My impression is that this is a late 20th-century quote from a fictionalized
account of Tubman’s life,” Sernett told Luker. “Whoever wishes to use the
dubious quote as a political zinger ought to cite a reliable source.”
Luker
then told Morgan, “Cite your source or quit pimpin’ out Harriet Tubman.”
hat
Tubman’s legacy would be misappropriated for political use was not particularly
surprising to Sernett, who writes in the introduction to his book that Tubman
may be “America’s most malleable icon.”
While Tubman has become one of the most recognized symbols of the anti–slavery
era, the actual facts of her life have become shrouded beneath her status as a
revered public icon. Her current prominence is indisputable. According to the
March 2008 Journal of American History, she’s the third most identified
African American historical figure (after Martin Luther King Jr., and Rosa
Parks). Her image graces a U.S. postage stamp. She is the subject of numerous
children’s books and educational materials. Congress is currently studying
whether her historic home should be turned into a national park.
Nonetheless, misinformation about “the Moses of her people” abounds. Tubman was
illiterate and left no written record of her own, but tales of her heroics, both
in rescuing other slaves and serving as a nurse, spy, and scout in the Civil
War, have been canonized in biographical narrative, not all of it perfectly
true.
These embellished semi-truths embedded in what seems to be literal biography are
at the root of the problem. “That is where much of the misinformation about her
has come from—historical fiction that is not always clear about when it is
historical and when it is fictive,” Sernett says.
Sernett, with his recent book, is helping sort things out. He chronicles the
life of the commemorated Tubman (the myth) and compares it with the actual
Tubman, in the process exploring “the myth that draws on the factual core but is
often in tension with it,” he writes.
Sernett is one of two Maxwell faculty members helping to adjust popular
understanding of Tubman’s history, the other being anthropologist Douglas
Armstrong. For most of this decade, Armstrong has overseen archaeological
projects at the homestead in Auburn, New York, where Tubman lived out almost 50
years of her life. His work, much of it conducted as field studies with Syracuse
University students, is providing a version of Tubman that is more genuine, more
three-dimensional than her iconic bearing.
“So little information about Tubman has been based on fact and so much based on
myth and created history,” says Armstrong. “. . . Hopefully, we’re coming to the
point where we can recognize her true contributions.”
et’s
start with a brief history lesson, with an eye out for imbedded myth: Harriet
Tubman was born Araminta Ross, probably in 1822, the fifth of nine children, in
Cambridge, Maryland. The daughter of slaves, “Minty” was nearly killed as a teen
by a blow to her head from an iron weight, thrown at another slave by an angry
overseer. She was severely injured and suffered from headaches, seizures, and
narcolepsy for the rest of her life. (This piece of the myth appears to be true!
Tubman is said to have been struck when she deliberately placed herself between
the overseer and the other slave. Her resulting impairment—the sleeping
spells—made her a less desirable slave.)
In 1844, Tubman married and around the same time shed her childhood nickname for
her mother’s name, Harriet. Two years later, her owner died; she and her family
were now at risk of being sold and dispersed. It was then that Tubman tapped
into the Underground Railroad and escaped to Philadelphia.
It’s said that over the next decade she made approximately 19 trips to the
eastern shore of Maryland, bringing 300 slaves to freedom and earning the title
of the “Black Moses.” (Well, not quite. Kate Clifford Larson, author of another
recent scholarly biography of Tubman, puts the number of trips between 11 and
13. Sernett says the documented number of slaves rescued is closer to 70,
although an exact number is impossible to know. Additional slaves made it north
on their own using instructions from Tubman, but that number is also impossible
to calculate.) Those rescued include her parents, brothers, and other family
members, many of whom settled in Canada and Central New York. As word of her
success spread, the bounty for her capture rose to as high as $40,000. (False!
According to Larson, “There never was a $40,000 reward for Tubman’s capture, a
figure that became grossly exaggerated through the retelling of her story.”)
In 1859, William Henry Seward, New York senator and later Lincoln’s secretary of
state, sold Tubman a home on the outskirts of Auburn, New York, where she
settled her aged parents and other family members before joining northern
abolitionists in support of Union efforts in the Civil War.
During the Civil War she headed back south, where she provided nursing care to
black soldiers and the hundreds of newly liberated slaves who crowded Union
camps. Her service also included spying and scouting behind Confederate lines,
and she is said to have become the first woman to command an armed military raid
when she guided Col. James Montgomery and his 2nd South Carolina black regiment
up the Combahee River, routing out Confederate outposts; destroying stockpiles
of cotton, food, and weapons; and liberating more than 700 slaves. (Only partly
true! “While she was certainly a nurse, spy, and scout for the Union Army, I
think the claims that she was the first female general and commanded a raid are
wishful thinking,” says Sernett. )
After the war, Tubman lived for almost 50 years in Auburn, where she raised pigs
and vegetables. She remarried (having been abandoned by her first husband) and
was active as a suffragist and humanitarian, opening a home for indigent African
American elderly, many of them former slaves.
uring
his 30 years teaching at SU, Milton Sernett has published seven books on African
American history, most of them focusing on religion, and conducted extensive
research on the abolition movement and Underground Railroad in Central New York.
In his writings and his classroom, the subject of Harriet Tubman was no
stranger. “You really can’t miss her in any facet of African American history
that deals with cultural icons,” he says.
Sernett was long puzzled as to why a figure who had clearly captured the public
imagination had been neglected by professional historians. The last attempt at a
serious biography about her had been written in 1943 by journalist Earl Conrad.
“It seemed strange that a figure who was so large a symbol should suffer such a
dearth of historical information,” he says.
As Sernett began research on a possible biography, the evidentiary trail led to
early biographies written by Geneva, New York, resident Sarah Bradford, based on
interviews with Tubman—works sponsored by Senator Seward and other Tubman
supporters in the late 1880s in an attempt to get Tubman’s story out and improve
her financial situation.
Sernett quickly found internal inconsistencies. “It gradually dawned on me that
much of what we as Americans thought we knew about Harriet Tubman was not
derived from good historical research but was a perpetuation of a
larger-than-life story,” he says. “The symbol had overpowered the life, had
overshadowed the historical person.”
Sernett began teaching a class, Harriet Tubman: Myth, Memory and History. (He
believes it to be the first such course on Tubman at any college or university.)
In addition to studying Tubman’s life, the class wrestled with the question of
why some historical figures are forgotten and others remembered, how American
memory
plays a role in choosing icons, and the extent to which individuals use icons in
their own lives to inspire. The course syllabus became a loose outline for
Sernett’s book of the same name, published by Duke University Press last fall.
“The interaction of the myth, memory, and history of Harriet Tubman is not
unlike that of any American icon, be it George Washington or Abraham Lincoln,”
says Sernett, who retired from full-time teaching in 2005. “One of the purposes
of myth is to give status to the myth tellers within their own social
environment. Harriet Tubman was very useful as different segments of American
society struggled to achieve parity at the table. Whether it’s women or African
Americans or the disabled, it’s amazing the variety of different groups who have
adopted her as their symbol.” Because Tubman left no writings of her own and
only limited information is available in the public record, Sernett says there
has been “elbow room for groups to create whatever they wish as a symbol to
honor her.”
By comparing the larger-than-life symbolic Tubman with the actual, historical
Tubman and analyzing how the Tubman icon has changed over time, Sernett explores
in his new book the interplay of history and myth in our national consciousness
and illustrates that the various constructions of “Black Moses” reveal as much
about their creators as they do about Tubman herself.
Setting the record straight does not diminish Tubman’s accomplishments. “The
humanistic values enshrined in her life strike right at the core values of the
American system—essentially, if you have enough faith and you struggle hard
enough you can triumph over adversity,” says Sernett. “She exemplifies what we
would all like to be.”
ntil
recently, the physical evidence related to Tubman only added to the
misinformation. People driving through Auburn, New York, for example, were often
excited when they passed the white clapboard house with a sign marking it as the
home of Harriet Tubman.
The only problem is, Tubman never lived there. She lived next door, in a house
that was originally wood, then rebuilt from bricks made on the property after
the wood house burned in 1880.
The white house is one of several dwellings on the 32-acre property Tubman
owned, which at one time included 10 structures and was a self-sustaining farm.
It is believed that the white clapboard house was part of the Tubman’s Home for
the Aged.
Much of this information has come to light—literally—only in the last decade,
the result of work led by Maxwell School anthropologist and archaeologist
Douglas Armstrong.
Armstrong has worked on issues related to African diaspora, slavery, and freedom
for 25 years, though his primary focus was on archaeological investigations in the
Caribbean. His work on Harriet Tubman, though, came somewhat by accident. In the
early 1990s, as part of a public policy and archaeology class, Armstrong and his
undergraduate students carried out an archaeological investigation of the former
Wesleyan Methodist Church in Syracuse, which housed a piece of art that may have
been made by African American refugees from slavery. Historical and
archaeological investigations confirmed the importance of the church in the
abolition movement. As part of a follow-up summer archaeological field school,
Armstrong and his students visited several sites associated with people involved
with the Freedom Train and/or Underground Railroad. One of those was the Harriet
Tubman Home in Auburn.
“I was surprised by how little was known of Tubman and the relative condition of
the structures associated with her life,” says Armstrong of his first look at
the property. “In time, I would come to understand the difficulties and
hardships involved with maintaining the property, but my initial impression was,
How could a site associated with such an important person in American history be
so poorly known?”
Since 1903, Tubman’s property has been owned by the African Methodist Episcopal
Zion Church in Auburn. (Tubman deeded it to her church because she couldn’t
afford the upkeep, and wanted to ensure its continuation as a home for aging
African Americans.) Since 1953, when they opened it to the public, members of
the church have struggled to maintain the property as a popular tourist site.
Though they undertook the task with a great sense of purpose and dedication to
keeping Tubman’s memory alive, they did so with limited funding.
During a class visit to the Tubman Home, Armstrong asked about the location of a
large brick building called John Brown Hall, evident in photos on display. He
was told that the structure no longer exists and that no one knows its original
location—only that it was somewhere back in the woods.
It was nearly lunch time. Armstrong told his students to go into the brush past
the mown part of the grounds. There would be no lunch until they found the
remains of the building.
“Fifteen minutes later, we were eating lunch on John Brown Hall,” he says.
“There was this huge rock pile covered with brick. It was fairly obvious, but it
was in the woods, lost to memory.”
Four years later, Armstrong set up his first archaeological project at the site.
He returned the following summer to give a four-week-long “field school” course,
now given every summer to a mix of undergraduate and graduate students—roughly
half of them anthropology majors or master’s students, and the others just
people interested in archaeology or in Tubman. Part of the six-credit course is
textual; students read Tubman biographies, histories, and other references to
her life and social network in Auburn. Students also learn the field techniques
of archaeology—how to map, excavate, analyze artifacts, and correlate what they
find in the context of where they’re working.
The first two summers were spent excavating around John Brown Hall, which had
served as a dormitory or infirmary of the Home for the Aged. Subsequently,
Armstrong and his team have surveyed the entire property, excavated a brick
kiln, and excavated around Tubman’s house and yard. In the process, they have
amassed a tremendous collection of material objects that, combined with other
information, paint a picture of Tubman’s life in Auburn.
“For example, from tax records, we know how many pigs she had, what kind of
orchards. Census records tell us who lived in the house, so we know that the
objects we found belong to Tubman and her close relatives,” says Armstrong, a
Maxwell Professor of Teaching Excellence and a Laura J. and L. Douglas Meredith
Professor (S.U.’s highest teaching honor).
The most exciting find came in 2004, on the second-to-last day of excavation,
just outside the door to Tubman’s house.
“All of a sudden, all of these artifacts just started coming out of the ground,”
says Anna Hill, a doctoral candidate in anthropology and Armstrong’s research
assistant on the Tubman project.
Earlier excavation had determined that Tubman’s original home had burned to the
ground in 1880, and a new brick structure built on the original foundation.
(Because Tubman’s second husband was a brick mason by trade and a brick kiln was
excavated on the property, it is believed that the bricks for this house were
made there.) What the team came upon was a builder’s trench that had been dug
along one side of the foundation. “They had pulled all the burned material from
the house, dumped it in this trench, and covered it up,” Hill says.
It was a huge discovery. “Everyone always thinks of Harriet Tubman as being
poverty stricken,” says Hill. “But we uncovered beautiful glass vases, china,
curtains. It completely changed how I imagined the inside of her house looking.”
In addition to completing the archaeology on the site, the key players at the
Tubman Home want to see the property physically restored in a manner authentic
to the Tubman era. To that end, Armstrong is working with Beth Crawford (of
Crawford & Stearns Architects and Preservation Planners), who has spearheaded
the physical restoration of the house; and consulting with the site’s directors,
Reverend Paul Carter and his wife, Christine. (The Carters represent the A.M.E.
Zion Church, which is funding the restoration, through Harriet Tubman Home Inc.
In addition, SU Chancellor Nancy Cantor has provided University support for both
the archaeological project and toward efforts to enhance the Tubman Home’s
public interpretation mission.)
The Tubman property consists of two tracts, one section that included her home
and farm and another with dwellings for her Home for the Aged. Unfortunately,
the residential portion was home to a bus company for many years. Cinderblock
additions turned the original barn into a bus garage. When hazmat abatement is
complete—there is an old fuel tank that must go—the additions will be removed
and the barn rebuilt to its earliest form. Using original photos and renderings,
the exterior of the house will be restored with porches added to mimic the
original, and a woodshed rebuilt on the rear.
“These buildings, rebuilt to their original state, will help tell an accurate
story of Tubman’s life,” Crawford says. “We are trying to document the real
story of the site so that we can interpret it correctly. There were a lot of
misconceptions before Doug came to the project in the way the site was
interpreted. So much of Doug’s work has explained what the site tells us about
Tubman’s life.”
In 1998, Sernett and Armstrong were both present when then-First Lady Hillary
Rodham Clinton visited the Tubman site as part of her Save America’s Treasures
tour and announced a $10,000 grant toward the restoration of the home. Now,
Armstrong and the A.M.E. Zion Church hope to have the Tubman Home reborn as a
national park. Armstrong is using his public policy expertise to help represent
the church in its negotiations with the National Park Service. Having worked for
eight years in association with the Virgin Islands National Park in St. John, he
understands both organizations well—the National Park Service and the A.M.E.
Zion Church. “I’m in a wonderful position where I can translate the hopes of
each organization to the other,” Armstrong says.
If all goes well, there will be National Park status and a full-scale
information and interpretation center at the Tubman site in time for the
centennial of her death in 2013.
“Harriet Tubman has an incredible, unique history,” says Armstrong. “Here she
was, a former slave, but she was also a property owner. She was a farmer. She
was involved in the brick-making industry. So here you have a black-constructed
house, from bricks that were probably made by blacks, on a site owned by blacks
in the late 1800s.”
In addition to Sernett’s book, there have been three scholarly biographies of
Tubman published since 2003. While today’s historians are attempting to set the
Tubman record straight, perhaps her property is the best means for Tubman to
tell her own story. “The life she led is one that is and should be
inspirational,” says Armstrong. “We have things Tubman owned on a landscape she
constructed. If we can present those material things in a setting that projects
that inspiration to future generations, I think we’re making a huge
contribution.”