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The Wall Street Journal paywall blocking this article, which was posted by
Dennis Brasky, has been defeated.
Texting exchange by two professors led to Frederick Douglass letter on
Emancipation Memorial
ByTed Mann
July 4, 2020 9:30 am ET

WASHINGTON—It was a text-message debate that led Scott Sandage and Jonathan
White to discover a vital American artifact last weekend: a long-forgotten
letter showing how Frederick Douglass really felt about a statue of Abraham
Lincoln and a slave.

Messrs. Sandage and White are history professors who have been on opposite
sides of a dispute over the Emancipation Memorial near the U.S. Capitol,
which depicts Lincoln in the act of freeing a kneeling Black man.

Mr. White, who teaches at Christopher Newport University in Virginia, wrote
in a newspaper that the statue should be preserved, even while conceding in
passing that Douglass disliked the design.

Mr. Sandage, a professor at Carnegie Mellon University in Pennsylvania,
considered the statue “visually unredeemable” because of its depiction of a
Black man kneeling in a subservient position to Lincoln.

Both men sit on the board of the Abraham Lincoln Institute and had been
debating whether the statue should remain or come down.

And so on the last Friday evening in June, sitting on the couch with his
wife watching “Gilmore Girls,” Mr. White was texting back and forth with
Mr. Sandage, pondering the alleged distaste for the statue by Douglass, who
had dedicated it with a famous address in 1876.

The account of Douglass criticizing the statue at its unveiling came from a
1916 book that included the recollection of activist John W. Cromwell, who
was in attendance.

Mr. White pointed out the account was secondhand from three decades later,
and could be apocryphal. Mr. Sandage had thought Cromwell’s account had
been corroborated and cited it in his own work in the 1990s. He went
searching for a corroborating account.

Last Saturday morning, Mr. Sandage started searching Douglass’s name and
the word “knee” in digitized newspaper archives at Newspapers.com. He found
no corroborating accounts of the remark, but something better: published
blurbs headlined “Frederick Douglass says” that referred to an 1876 letter
from Douglass criticizing the monument.

After 20 minutes, and narrowing the search using Douglass’s flashiest
adjective (“couchant”), Mr. Sandage uncovered Douglass’s letter itself.

Five days after the unveiling, in a letter to the editor of the National
Republican newspaper in Washington, Douglass had critiqued the statue’s
design and suggested how more dignified depictions of free Black people
would improve the park.

“The negro here, though rising, is still on his knees and nude,” Douglass
wrote. “What I want to see before I die is a monument representing the
negro, not couchant on his knees like a four-footed animal, but erect on
his feet like a man.”

Mr. Sandage said he didn’t at first realize the importance of his
discovery, but alerted Mr. White and texted an image of the letter to David
Blight, a Douglass biographer and history professor at Yale University.

Mr. Blight was “practically giddy,” Mr. Sandage said.

Mr. Blight in turn emailed Richard Fox, a Lincoln scholar at the University
of Southern California, who hadn’t seen the letter either.

“This all happened on Saturday morning,” Mr. Fox said. “None of us knew
until three days ago that there was any evidence in Douglass’s entire life
that he had actually said these things, and then there it was.”

Mr. White and Mr. Sandage weren’t done. Their searches also uncovered an
obituary for Charlotte Scott, the former slave whose $5 donation had kicked
off the fundraising to pay for the monument on the day of Lincoln’s death.

The statue was paid for by donations from former slaves, including Black
veterans of the Union Army, but the design was selected by the Western
Sanitary Commission, a St. Louis charity run by white people, according to
the National Park Service.

The commission selected the design by Thomas Ball, an American sculptor
living in Trieste, Italy, after years of appeals failed to raise sufficient
funds for a larger and more complex monument, historians said.

Messrs. White and Sandage also found a reference in the Washington Bee, a
Black newspaper in the city, to “the Charlotte Scott Emancipation statue in
Lincoln Park.”

Just like that, a document apparently unknown to Douglass’s biographers and
not found in the orator’s papers at the Library of Congress had landed
squarely in the middle of the debate that has swept the nation and the
neighborhood around Lincoln Park where the statue stands.

Amid the Black Lives Matter Movement and the protests following the killing
of George Floyd, momentum is gathering to remove or alter statues like the
Emancipation Memorial, following successful calls to take down monuments of
Confederate generals.

In Washington, a candidate for District Council, Marcus Goodwin, has
gathered roughly 7,000 signatures on a petition to either remove or alter
the Lincoln statue. Eleanor Holmes Norton, Washington, D.C.’s nonvoting
representative in Congress, has said she would introduce legislation to
move the statue to a museum. And in Boston, a panel voted unanimously on
Tuesday to take down a replica of the Emancipation statue.

Mr. Goodwin has said that concerns about the statue could be addressed by
adding more Black figures to the statue that are in standing positions,
including contemporaries of Lincoln like Douglass. It is a compromise that
the newly discovered Douglass letter seems to anticipate.

Still others believe the existing monument should be moved, including Kirk
Savage of the University of Pittsburgh, whose work includes “Standing
Soldiers, Kneeling Slaves,” a history of monuments erected after the Civil
War.

“It is a distorting image,” Mr. Savage said. “It’s a white savior narrative
that puts Lincoln in the position of a kind of saint, working a miracle
cure on the enslaved population.”

If new additions to the memorial are done right, Mr. Sandage said, “the
original statue would become an artifact and the new groupings around it
would become the focus.”

Mr. White said that “people of good will are on both sides” of the
issue. “If people had listened to [Douglass] it might have resolved it 144
years ago,” he said.

As for their discovery, Mr. Sandage credited the activists, whose
demonstrations at the park had led to his debate with Mr. White.

“That’s how historians work,” he said. “We argue with each other and then
go look again.”

Messrs. White and Sandage said the find helped them reach an agreement,
which they proposed this week in an article for Smithsonian Magazine.
Citing Douglass’s words, they argued that “no one monument could be made to
tell the whole truth of any subject which it might be designed to
illustrate.”

The historians suggest adding more statues—of Douglass and of Scott —and
better explaining the story of Archer Alexander, who was the model for the
slave figure. Mr. Alexander was the last man arrested under the Fugitive
Slave Act, the Park Service says.

“If the statue is to stand there any longer, it should no longer stand
alone,” they wrote. “Who would be more deserving of honor with an
additional statue than the freedwoman who conceived of the monument?”

https://www.wsj.com/articles/how-a-lincoln-douglass-debate-led-to-historic-discovery-11593869400
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