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James Bradley (former slave)

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James Bradley
Bornc. 1810
Guinea, Africa
DiedKnown to be alive in 1837.
Occupation(s)Freedman (former slave); planned to study for ministry
Years active1833—1837
Known forParticipating in Lane Theological Seminary's 1834 debates on slavery

James Bradley (c. 1810 – >1837) was a slave who was able to purchase his own freedom. He headed for Cincinnati in the free state of Ohio. Hungry for education, he associated himself with Lane Theological Seminary, though he was not enrolled as a student, and played a central role in the famous debates on slavery held at Lane in 1834. He wrote there a short autobiographical statement that is the major source for information about him.[1] With the Lane Rebels he left Lane and moved to Oberlin, and studied a year in an affiliated preparatory school.

Nothing is known of his life after 1837. There is no known image of or physical description of Bradley.[2]

Biography

James described himself as "from Guinea",[3] which was not a country but a region of west Africa. He was captured as a small child — "the soul-destroyers tore me from my mother’s arms"[1] — and brought to America illegally, since legal importation of slaves had ended in 1808. After passing through the port of Charleston, South Carolina, he was purchased by a man named Bradley from Pendleton County, Kentucky, from whom he took his name. He was a "wonderfully kind master", although James was kicked and overworked to the point he became ill. His owner moved to Arkansas and then died, and his widow used James to run her plantation. A stray detail reveals that he lived near the Choctaw mission,[4] which was near Fort Towson in modern Oklahoma,[5] although it was then in the Arkansas Territory. After five years[6] of hard work and doing without sleep, he managed to earn enough to "purchase his own body", his freedom.[7]

After toiling all day for my mistress, I used to sleep three or four hours, and then get up and work for myself the remainder of the night. I made collars for horses, out of plaited husks. I could weave one in about eight hours; and generally I took time enough from my sleep to make two collars in the course of a week. I sold them for fifty cents each. ...With my first money I bought a pig. The next year I earned for myself about thirteen dollars; and the next about thirty. There was a good deal of wild land in the neighborhood, that belonged to Congress. I used to go out with my hoe, and dig up little patches, which I planted with corn, and got up in the night to tend it. My hogs were fattened with this corn, and I used to sell a number each year. Besides this, I used to raise small patches of tobacco, and sell it to buy more corn for my pigs. In this way I worked for five years; at the end of which time, after taking out my losses, I found that I had earned one hundred and sixty dollars. With this money I hired my own time for two years. During this period, I worked almost all the time, night and day. The hope of liberty stung my nerves, and braced up my soul so much, that I could do with very little sleep or rest. I could do a great deal more work than I was ever able to do before. At the end of the two years, I had earned three hundred dollars, besides feeding and clothing myself. I now bought my time for eighteen months longer, and went two hundred and fifty miles west, nearly into Texas, where I could make more money. Here I earned enough to buy myself, which I did in 1833, about one year ago. I paid for myself, including what I gave for my time, about seven hundred dollars.[1]

James had a great longing for education, and taught himself to read.

My master had kept me ignorant of everything he could. I was never told anything about God, or my own soul. ...[H]ow I longed to be able to read the Bible! I made out to get an old spelling-book, which I carried in my hat for many months, until I could spell pretty well, and read easy words. When I got up in the night to work, I used to read for a few minutes, if I could manage to get a light. Indeed, every chance I could find, I worked away at my spelling-book.[1]

He got one of his "young masters" (his owner's children) to teach him to write, but his mistress ended that after one day. "That was the end of my instruction in writing, but I persevered, and made marks of all sorts and shapes that I could think of. By turning every way, I was, after a long time, able to write tolerably plain."

He achieved his freedom in 1833. "As soon as I was free, I started for a free State." Apparently retracing the route he had traveled from Kentucky to Arkansas, he arrived via northern Kentucky at Cincinnati, Ohio.

When I arrived in Cincinnati, I heard of Lane Seminary, about two miles out of the city. I had for years been praying to God that my dark mind might see the light of knowledge. I asked for admission into the Seminary. They pitied me, and granted my request, though I knew nothing of the studies which were required for admission. I am so ignorant, that I suppose it will take me two years to get up with the lowest class in the institution. But in all respects I am treated just as kindly, and as much like a brother by the students, as if my skins as white, and my education as good as their own. Thanks to the Lord, prejudice against color does not exist in Lane Seminary. If my life is spared, I shall probably spend several years here, and prepare to preach the gospel.[1]

A telling anecdote is that on an occasion in which the Lane president, Lyman Beecher, invited the students to his home, James felt it wiser not to attend.[8]: 95 

After participating in the Lane debates, discussed below, James went with the other Lane Rebels to Oberlin Collegiate Institute (later Oberlin College) in 1835. He enrolled in 1836 in the most important of the several satellite schools Oberlin set up to handle the great influx of students: the Sheffield Manual Labor Institute, in Sheffield, Ohio, 17 miles (27 km) northeast of Oberlin. Sheffield "stressed agricultural manual labor and preparatory [high school level] coursework".[6] "The Sheffield Institute planned to grow mulberry trees on which to nurture silkworms in order to create silk. The project failed, and the institute only lasted for one year."[9] The school closed when "amalgamated" ("racially" integrated) schooling, as it was called then, was effectively made illegal in Ohio, since the Legislature refused to charter the school if it admitted "colored" students.

Unfortunately, nothing is known about Bradley's life after 1837. The final reference to him is in a letter that year of another Lane Rebel, C. Stewart Renshaw, who refers to him as "our dear brother".[4] He may be the "negro, late of Sheffield College", who helped in the liberation of fourteen slaves from one plantation.[10]: 60–61 

The debates on slavery

Background

The arrival of James at Lane — James was Lane's first and only African-American student — coincided with the arrival of several dozen students who mostly had been studying at the Oneida Institute, near Utica, New York. The leader of this group, by consensus and acclamation, was the charismatic activist Theodore Dwight Weld.

William Garrison had just begun in 1831 what would be the longest-running and most influential anti-slavery newspaper, The Liberator. In 1832 he published a book continuing a topic he had already raised in the newspaper, Thoughts on African Colonization, Or, An Impartial Exhibition of the Doctrines, Principles and Purposes of the American Colonization Society. In both, he attacks the American Colonization Society and its project of sending free blacks to Africa. Garrison said the Society was "pernicious, cruel, and delusive",[11]: iv  that it was a deceitful organization devoted not to eliminating slavery but to protecting it. Sending blacks to Africa was not what they themselves wanted; they said they were no more African than Americans are British.

The effect of these publications was cataclysmic. At Oberlin's rival, Western Reserve College, nothing else was talked about on the campus. Beriah Green preached four sermons on them,[12] which led to his resignation under pressure, to become president of Oneida. Two of Western Reserve's other three professors left shortly afterwards. Weld was well informed about this.

So as to bring the issue to the forefront of the Lane community as well, shortly after his arrival at Lane, Weld organized a series of "debates" on the topic of colonization versus abolitionism, which took place on 18 days in February, 1834. (For more on the debates, see Lane Theological Seminary#The slavery debates.)

Bradley's role in the debates

Bradley spoke at these debates, the only former slave to speak. "An argument can be made that they were the two most important hours of the debates."[6] As Bradley wrote it down later:

How strange it is that anybody should believe any human being could be a slave, and yet be contented! I do not believe that there ever was a slave, who did not long for liberty. I know very well that slave-owners take a great deal of pains to make the people in the free states believe that the slaves are happy; but I know, likewise, that I was never acquainted with a slave, however well he was treated, who did not long to be free. There is one thing about this, that people in the free states do not understand. When they ask slaves whether they wish for liberty, they answer, "No"; and very likely they will go as far as to say they would not leave their masters for the world. But at the same time, they desire liberty more than anything else, and have, perhaps all along been laying plans to get free. The truth is, if a slave shows any discontent, he is sure to be treated worse, and worked harder for it; and every slave knows this. This is why they are careful not to show any uneasiness when white men ask them about freedom. When they are alone by themselves, all their talk is about liberty – liberty! It is the great thought and feeling that fills the minds full all the time.[13]

After telling his life story, in the words of his classmate Henry B. Stanton (future husband of Elizabeth Cady Stanton):

James Bradley, the emancipated slave above alluded to, addressed us nearly two hours; and I wish his speech could have been heard by every opponent of immediate emancipation — to wit: first, that "it would be unsafe to the community"; second, that "the condition of the emancipated negroes would be worse than it now is — that they are incompetent to provide for themselves — that they would become paupers and vagrants, and would rather steal than work for wages." This shrewd and intelligent black cut up these white objections by the roots, and withered and scorched them under the sun of sarcastic argumentation for nearly an hour, to which the assembly responded in repeated and spontaneeus roars of laughter, which were heartily joined in by both Colonizalionists and Abolitionists. Do not understand me as saying, that his speech was devoid of argument. No. It contained sound logic, enforced by apt illustrations. I wish the slanderers of negro intellect could have witnessed this unpremeditated effort.... He is now a beloved and respected member of this institution. Now, Mr. Editor, can slaves take care of themselves if emancipated? I answer the question in the language employed by brother Bradley on the above occasion. "They have to lake care of, and support themselves now, and their master, and his family into the bargain; and this being so, it would be strange if they cculd not provide for themselves, when disencumbered from this load." He said the great desire of the slaves was — "liberty and education." And shall this heaven-born desire be trampled in the dust by a free and Christian nation?[14][15]

"I doubt there was a dry eye in the house," wrote an eyewitness.[8]: 61 

"I don't think it's an exaggeration to say that Bradley's contribution was critical to the debates. Theodore Weld had the impassioned fervor and unassailable logic; William T. Allan and Huntington Lyman generated sympathy and outrage with their tales of victimization and abuse; but someone needed to attack the pervasive stereotypes and demonstrate that the John C. Calhouns were wrong. Only James Bradley could do that, and by all accounts he did it masterfully.

After the debates, Bradley became 'a manager' of the newly formed student anti-slavery society."[6]

In Bradley's audience was Harriet Beecher (Stowe); her father Lyman Beecher was president of Lane. Famously called by Lincoln "the little woman who wrote the book that started this great war", her commitment to exposing the horrors of slavery began, so far as is known, with the Lane debates, to which Bradley was central.

Bradley and Oberlin College

The Trustees of Lane, with the acquiescence of Beecher, then prohibited any future discussions of topics not in the curriculum, and most of the students, including all the leaders, withdrew. James did so as well. When Shipherd came to Cincinnati and invited the "Lane Rebels" to attend Oberlin College instead, Bradley was interested. But there was one hitch: Oberlin College had never had a Black student, and there was hostility in some parts to doing so, most notably from Oberlin's co-founder Philo Stewart. The most controversial condition the Lane Rebels imposed on Oberlin as a condition of their enrollment, was that Oberlin must accept African-American students on an equal basis, and especially their "beloved" James. So it is in part because of James that Oberlin, reluctantly and under pressure, agreed to admit African-American students.

Statue and plaque

A statue of Bradley was erected in 1988 as part of the Cincinnati Bicentennial. It is located in Covington, Kentucky. The statue, by George Danhines, shows Bradley sitting on a riverfront bench, facing north across the Ohio River to Cincinnati, reading a book. Photo of statue Photo of plaque

Text of the accompanying plaque:

James Bradley

The life of this one man summarizes the experience of millions of Afro-Americans. Born in Africa in the early nineteenth century, slave traders brought Bradley to America as an infant. By the time he was 18 years old, Bradley managed his owner's Arkansas plantation[.] Over a five year period he earned enough money to purchase his freedom.

As a free man Bradley crossed the Ohio River, here at Covington, the legal and symbolic divide between slavery and freedom[.] He enrolled at Lane Seminary in Cincinnati in 1834. Bradley was the only ex-slave who participated in the famous Lane Seminary debates on slavery and abolitionism. Bradley's participation stood as an eloquent witness to the equality of all. His speech declared that the great desire of the slaves was "liberty and education."

This sculpture made possible by: The Bernstein Family/Mike Fink, the Kentucky Post, Jerry Deters and family,
Peoples Liberty Bank, Hopple Plastics, Inc., St. Elizabeth Medical Center, Kenton County Airport Board.

Sculptor. George Danhines

An official project of the

Greater Cincinnati Bicentennial Commission, 1988

In 2016, the statue was restored.[16]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Bradley, James (1834). "History of James Bradley, by myself". In Child, Lydia Maria (ed.). Oasis. (Reprinted in The Emancipator, November 4, 1834.). Boston. pp. 106–112.
  2. ^ Wolff, Christine (November 2, 1987). "Former slave receives honor 153 years late". Cincinnati Enquirer. p. 39 – via newspapers.com.
  3. ^ "Anti-Slavery Society in Lane Seminary". The Liberator. April 5, 1834. p. 1 – via newspapers.com.
  4. ^ a b Renshaw, C. Stewart (May 19, 1837). "The American Board and Slavery". The Liberator. p. 1 – via newspapers.com.
  5. ^ Historical sketches of the missions under the care of the Board of Foreign Missions of the Presbyterian Church U.S.A. (4th ed.). Philadelphia: Woman's Foreign Missiknary Society of the Presbyterian Church. 1897. p. 224.
  6. ^ a b c d Gorman, Ron (2013). "James Bradley – from hopeless bondage to Lane Rebel". Oberlin Heritage Center. Retrieved November 3, 2019.
  7. ^ 51 signatories, among them Bradley (December 15, 1834). A statement of the reasons which induced the students of Lane Seminary, to dissolve their connection with that institution. (Reprinted in its entirety in The Liberator, January 10, 1835.). p. 26.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  8. ^ a b Lesick, Lawrence Thomas (1980). The Lane rebels : evangelicalism and antislavery in antebellum America. Metuchen, New Jersey: Scarecrow Press. ISBN 9780810813724.
  9. ^ "James Bradley". Oberlin Heritage Center. Retrieved November 2, 2019.
  10. ^ Smith, Delazon, "a student" (1837). A history of Oberlin, or New lights of the West. Embracing the conduct and character of the officers and students of the institution; together with the colonists, from the founding of the institution. Cleveland.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  11. ^ Garrison, William. Thoughts on African Colonization, Or, An Impartial Exhibition of the Doctrines, Principles and Purposes of the American Colonization Society.
  12. ^ Green, Beriah (1833). Four sermons preached in the chapel of the Western Reserve College: on Lord's Days, November 18th and 25th, and December 2nd and 9th, 1832. Cleveland.
  13. ^ Bradley, James (June 1834), Brief Account of an Emancipated Slave Written by Himself, retrieved October 31, 2019
  14. ^ Stanton, H. B. (1834). Debate at the Lane Seminary. Boston: Garrison and Knapp.
  15. ^ Stanton, H. B. (March 29, 1834). "Cheering Intelligence". The Liberator. p. 2 – via newspapers.com.
  16. ^ Wartman, Scott (June 14, 2016). "Covington statues get makeover". Cincinnati Enquirer.