Inspirational Stories of Women
Who Made a Difference!
October 2008
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MEMORABLE QUOTE
“I am confident not many years
will roll by before the horrible traffic in human beings will be
destroyed…my earnest prayers have been poured out that the Lord
would be pleased to permit me to be instrumental of good to
these degraded, oppressed and suffering fellow-creatures.”
~Angelina Grimke
Social Reformers
|
Angelina
& Sarah Grimke
Abolitionists
|
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“I am confident not many years
will roll by before the horrible traffic in human beings will be
destroyed…my earnest prayers have been poured out that the Lord
would be pleased to permit me to be instrumental of good to
these degraded, oppressed and suffering fellow-creatures.”
When Angelina Grimke wrote this
about slavery in her diary in 1835 she was expressing not only
her own sentiments, but also those of her sister Sarah, and many
of her fellow reformers. For as we know slavery was a major
national issue at the time and of course played a part in the
events leading up to and culminating in the Civil War. Also,
slavery was an issue that naturally attracted reformers who
called for its abolition – thus they became known as
abolitionists - and there were many such reformers in the years
before the Civil War. Among these were Elizabeth Cady Stanton,
Susan B. Anthony, and Lucy Stone and while they are better known
for their advocacy of legal rights for women they were also
active abolitionists. However, whether they mounted the lecture
platform for abolition or women’s rights, they followed two
other women who preceded them, laying the foundation for the
women reformers who followed them. These were Sarah and Angelina
Grimke.
While the Grimke sisters were
unique in that they grew up in the midst of slavery itself, what
made them particularly distinctive was how they broke the
barriers that denied women the right to speak in public.
The Grimke sisters were born in
1792 (Sarah) and 1805 (Angelina) in Charleston, South Carolina,
into a family of wealthy slave-holding aristocrats, their father
a prominent politician and lawyer who served as South Carolina’s
chief judge. Since few girls at the time received the education
given their brothers, the sisters received minimal schooling
from private tutors.
Yet Sarah was not content with
that and decided to not only become a lawyer like her father but
also attend college with her brother. When her parents
discovered this they were aghast and quickly derailed her plans.
Despite their opposition, according to one report, Mr. Grimke is
supposed to have remarked that if Sarah not been a woman she
would have been a great jurist.
When Sarah was 26 she
accompanied her father to Philadelphia for medical attention and
there she became acquainted with the Society of Friends or the
Quakers. She was intrigued with their piety, sincerity and
simplicity but also by their opposition to slavery. Though she
had grown up among slaves Sarah was uncomfortable with the
institution and one experience was particularly memorably
disturbing. It happened when at age 5 she witnessed a slave
being whipped and it was so devastating to her that she later
recounted how she had tried to board a steamer to travel where
there was no slavery.
After her father’s death in
1818 Sarah left her Quaker friends in Philadelphia to return to
Charleston, where she persuaded Angelina to became a Quaker. The
new convert joined her sister in Philadelphia several years
later. However, though the sisters had discovered sympathetic
friends, there were still challenges with their new religious
affiliation and their continued opposition to slavery.
Though the Society of Friends
had banned slave ownership for their members, many Quakers felt
abolitionists were too outspoken, even though some of the most
prominent abolitionists were Friends. However, many Quakers
differed about whether non-Quakers should own slaves and in fact
Indiana Friends split on the issue. But in general none of the
Quakers sought or even welcomed the public attention brought by
some of the outspoken abolitionists. Soon this attitude affected
the Grimkes.
It began when Angelina wrote a
letter to the editor of The Liberator, an abolitionist
newspaper founded and operated by nationally known
speaker/writer William Lloyd Garrison. Angelina’s letter was
published without her permission and that brought censure from
the Grimkes’ fellow Quakers. At that point the sisters had to
choose – remain Quakers and stay silent or leave the group and
be free to actively oppose slavery. They realized they had no
choice but to leave. So as they withdrew from the Friends
intending to speak freely against slavery they did so but in
such a way that would have far reaching effects on abolitionism
and other reform movements of the time. This happened when they
ended up addressing public meetings, speaking to audiences of
both men and women – together, something society decreed was
inappropriate for “decent” women.
Presumably they never intended
to cause any controversy, because they originally planed to
speak only to women – which was permissible – in a private
setting. But soon what happened forced a change of focus and it
began in late 1836 after a Female Anti Slavery Society
convention in New York.
Biographer Catherine H. Birney
in her 1885 book Sarah and Angelina Grimke: The First
American Women Advocates of Abolition and Women’s Rights
relates what happened next: “ By the time the Convention was
over, the sisters, and portions of their history, had become so
well known to abolitionists, that the leaders felt they had
secured invaluable champions in these two Quaker women… both
distinguished by their ability to testify as eye-witnesses
against the monstrous evils of slavery.
“It was proposed that they
should begin to hold a series of parlor meetings, for women
only, of course. But it was soon found that they had, in private
conversations, made such an impression that no parlors would be
large enough to accommodate all who desired to hear them speak
more at length.” A local minister offered them a room at his
church and the organization decided to hold their meetings
there. They gave out notices at other churches without
mentioning the speakers, but soon it became known that the
Grimke sisters were to address the meeting. When this happened
“…a shock went through the whole community. Not a word would
have been said if they had restricted themselves to a private
parlor meeting, but that it should be transferred to such a
public parlor of a church made quite a different affair of it.”
Their fellow abolitionists and even the sisters themselves were
wary of proceeding, “Sarah and Angelina were appalled, the
latter especially, feeling almost as if she was the bold
creature she was represented to be. She declared her utter
inability, in the face of such antagonism, to go on with the
work she had undertaken, and the more she looked at it, the more
unnatural and unwise it seemed to her…”
But Angelina “’called upon Him
who has ever hearkened unto my cry…’” and decided to go ahead.
“'We went to the meeting at 3
o’clock and found about three hundred women there,’” Angelina
wrote later “ ‘…After a moment, I arose and spoke about 40
minutes, feeling, I think, entirely embarrassed. Then dear
sister did her part better than I did.’” The biographer
continued: “This account of the first assembly of women, not
Quakers, in a public place in America, addressed by American
women, is deeply interesting and touching from its very
simplicity.” She continued from an 1885 point of view: “We who
are so accustomed to hear women speak to promiscuous audiences
on any and every subject, and to hear them applauded, too, can
scarcely realize the prejudice which, half a century back,
sought to close the lips of two refined Christian ladies,
desirous only of adding their testimony against the greatest
evil of any age or country…”
What made this controversial
was that even though their audience was all female, they were
women in speaking in public. Then a year later they added to
their audience – and to the controversy.
In June, 1837 there was held a
convention of the Massachusetts Anti Slavery Society convention,
attended by many the Grimkes as well as major abolitionist
figures of the time. Birney’s biography takes up the account: “A
series of public meetings was arranged for them as soon as the
Convention adjourned, and the first was held in Dorchester, in
the town hall, to which they repaired upon finding the number of
those who wished to hear them too great to be accommodated in a
private house. Their next was in Boston on the following
afternoon…. It was at this meeting that a reverend gentleman set
the example which was followed by two or three other men, of
slyly sliding into a back seat to hear for himself what manner
of thing this woman’s speaking was. Satisfied of its superior
quality, and alarmed at its effects upon the audience, he
shortly afterwards took great pains to prove that it was
unscriptural for a woman to speak in public.” But soon more men
began to attend – but not just to condemn but also because they
were interested and even sympathetic to the subject.
As the sisters continued to
speak to large groups, Angelina later wrote a friend, including
details about the meetings. “’Before the end of the first week,
she records: - Nearly thirty men present, pretty easy to speak.’
A few days later the number of men had increased to fifty, with
‘great openness on their part to hear.’” The biographer
described one audience of over one thousand: “We are told that
the men present listened in amazement. They were spellbound and
impatient of the slightest noise which might cause the loss of
word from the speakers. Another meeting was called for, and held
the next evening. This was crowded to excess, many going away
unable to get even standing-room. ’At least one hundred,’
Angelina writes, ‘stood around the doors, and, on the outside of
each window, men stood with their heads above the lowered sash.
Very easy speaking indeed.’”
The biographer continued: “But
now the opposers of abolitionism and especially the clergy,
began to be alarmed. It amounted to very little that (to borrow
the language of one of the newspapers of the day) ‘two fanatical
women…should, by the novelty of their course, draw to their
meetings idle and curious women.’ But it became a different
matter when men, the intelligent, respectable and cultivated
citizens of every town, began to crowd to hear them, even
following them from one place to another, and giving them loud
and honest applause. Then they were adjudged immodest, and their
conduct denounced as unwomanly and demoralizing…. Letters of
reproval, admonition, and persuasion, some anonymous, some
signed by good conscientious people, came to the sisters
frequently. Clergymen denounced them from their pulpits,
especially warning their women members against them. Municipal
corporations refused the use of halls for their meetings and
threats of personal violence came from various quarters.” But
Sarah, writing to a friend, summarized their dedication to their
cause: “’They think to frighten us from the field of duty; but
they do not move us. God is our shield, and we do not fear what
man can do to us.’” Gradually as more women took to the lecture
platform the opposition lessened.
In addition to their public
speaking, the sisters in 1839 the sisters published a
compilation of articles from Southern newspapers under the title
American Slavery as it is: Testimony of a Thousand Witnesses.
Reportedly Harriet Beecher Stowe used much of the content as
resource material for Uncle Tom’s Cabin.
In 1838 Angelina married fellow
reformer Theodore Weld and at first they both anticipated
Angelina’s continuing to speak. However, with her growing family
and household responsibilities she eventually retired from the
lecture platform and was soon joined by Sarah who also retired
and came to make her home with the Welds.
Gradually the sisters retired
from public notice but in 1868 they had an opportunity to put
their views into action.
About that time they learned
that their brother Henry had fathered two sons by a slave woman,
and the sisters welcomed these young men into their home.
Archibald Henry Grimke and Francis Grimke attended Harvard, then
Archibald became a lawyer and later ambassador to Haiti and
Francis attended a prominent seminary and became a Presbyterian
minister.
In their later years the
sisters remained in retirement, but continued to support their
causes from behind the scenes. Sarah died in 1873 and Angelina
in 1879.
As advocates for abolition as
well as other reforms, the Grimkes courageously overcame both
the challenges of personal opposition as well as society
disapproval. And by doing so they not only spoke about an
important issue, but also inspired and encouraged women
reformers to come.
Anne Adams is the author of "First of All, a Wife: Sketches of
American First Ladies". You can purchase her book using the
link below:
http://www.pcpublications.org/proddetail.php?prod=FIRSTLADIES
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