A Social History of the American Negro eBook

Benjamin Griffith Brawley
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 546 pages of information about A Social History of the American Negro.

A Social History of the American Negro eBook

Benjamin Griffith Brawley
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 546 pages of information about A Social History of the American Negro.
obtained permits to attend the funeral.  Here and again their plan of getting together was brought into play.  In Richmond they would go to the church by ones and twos and there sit as near together as convenient.  At the close of the service a line of march would be formed when sufficiently far from the church to make it safe to do so.  It is reported that the members were faithful to each other and that every obligation was faithfully carried out.  This was the first form of insurance known to the Negro from which his family received a benefit.[1]

[Footnote 1:  Hampton Conference Report, No. 8]

All along of course a determining factor in the Negro’s social progress was the service that he was able to render to any community in which he found himself as well as to his own people.  Sometimes he was called upon to do very hard work, sometimes very unpleasant or dangerous work; but if he answered the call of duty and met an actual human need, his service had to receive recognition.  An example of such work was found in his conduct in the course of the yellow fever epidemic in Philadelphia in 1793.  Knowing that fever in general was not quite as severe in its ravages upon Negroes as upon white people, the daily papers of Philadelphia called upon the colored people in the town to come forward and assist with the sick.  The Negroes consented, and Absalom Jones and William Gray were appointed to superintend the operations, though as usual it was upon Richard Allen that much of the real responsibility fell.  In September the fever increased and upon the Negroes devolved also the duty of removing corpses.  In the course of their work they encountered much opposition; thus Jones said that a white man threatened to shoot him if he passed his house with a corpse.  This man himself the Negroes had to bury three days afterwards.  When the epidemic was over, under date January 23, 1794, Matthew Clarkson, the mayor, wrote the following testimonial:  “Having, during the prevalence of the late malignant disorder, had almost daily opportunities of seeing the conduct of Absalom Jones and Richard Allen, and the people employed by them to bury the dead, I with cheerfulness give this testimony of my approbation of their proceedings, as far as the same came under my notice.  Their diligence, attention, and decency of deportment, afforded me, at the time, much satisfaction.”  After the lapse of years it is with something of the pathos of martyrdom that we are impressed by the service of these struggling people, who by their self-abnegation and patriotism endeavored to win and deserve the privileges of American citizenship.

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A Social History of the American Negro from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.