Authors:
Historic Era:
Historic Theme:
Subject:
August 1976 | Volume 27, Issue 5
Authors:
Historic Era:
Historic Theme:
Subject:
August 1976 | Volume 27, Issue 5
In the violent, restless decade before the Civil War some close ties were forged between the woman's-rights movement and abolitionism. The great feminist Susan B. Anthony, for instance, was a paid agent for the American Anti-Slavery Society, while Frederick Douglass, the black abolitionist, was a frequent speaker at woman’s-rights conventions. But if the relationship was occasionally a close one, it was rarely tranquil. Many feminists held that supporting the antislavery issue weakened their own cause, and there were abolitionists who felt woman’s rights were merely a red herring. At times the controversy became bitter and heated, as it did when the proceedings of an 1851 woman s-rights convention in Akron, Ohio, were interrupted by the appearance of the lean, fantastic figure of Sajourner Truth.
Born a slave in New York State in the last years of the eighteenth century and christened Isabella, Sojourner adopted her name in 1843, when, she said, the voice of God commanded her to take to the road and spread His word. During her travels she came into contact with the abolitionists and adopted their cause. She soon became something of a legend: a lanky, energetic woman who, though illiterate all her life, could quote endless Scripture and hold any audience spellbound. Her speeches were powerful enough to get her mobbed in Missouri and cudgeled in Kansas. But nowhere could she have been more effective than in her appearance at Akron. The following dramatic account of the episode was recorded by Frances Dana Gage, an Ohio feminist who was presiding over the 1851 convention.
The leaders of the movement trembled on seeing a tall, gaunt black woman in a gray dress and white turban, surmounted with an uncouth sun-bonnet, march deliberately into the church, walk with the air of a queen up the aisle, and take her seat upon the pulpit steps. A buzz of disapprobation was heard all over the house, and there fell on the listening ear, “An abolition affair!” “Woman’s rights and niggers!” “I told you so!” “Go it, darkey!”
I chanced on that occasion to wear my first laurels in public life as president of the meeting. At my request order was restored, and the business of the Convention went on. Morning, afternoon, and evening exercises came and went. … Again and again, timorous and trembling ones came to me and said, with earnestness, “Don’t let her speak, Mrs. Gage, it will ruin us. Every newspaper in the land will have our cause mixed up with abolition and niggers, and we shall be utterly denounced.” My only answer was, “We shall see when the time comes.”
The second day the work waxed warm. Methodist, Baptist, Episcopal, Presbyterian, and Universalist ministers came in to hear and discuss the resolutions presented. One claimed superior rights and privileges for man, on the ground of “superior intellect”; another, because of the “manhood of Christ; if God had desired the equality of woman, He would have given some token of His will through