The Shocking Story Behind the White Slave Photographs

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In my previous post, 
<http://arollingcrone.blogspot.com/2012/03/white-slave-children-of-new-orleans-why.html>
 I 
discussed the recently-in-the-news photos of the “White Slave Children of 
New Orleans” which portrayed only white-appearing slave children, not black 
ones.  I explained how this apparently wrong-minded and politically 
incorrect practice of the Abolitionists had originated nearly a decade 
earlier with a daguerreotype of a white-skinned little girl named Mary 
Botts.  She was purchased and brought north by her father (an escaped 
slave) with the help of Senator Charles Sumner of Massachusetts who paraded 
her (and circulated her photographic image) around New England making her a 
celebrity described in *The New York Times* and other media.

In 1855, Sumner may have been the first to focus on white-appearing slaves 
to raise indignation against the practice of slavery.  It worked so well 
that, after Lincoln’s emancipation proclamation of Jan. 1, 1863, 
Northerners and Abolitionists who wanted to support schools for former 
slaves went to New Orleans looking for white slave children to bring up 
north and  photograph.  According to Celia Caust-Ellenbogen of Swarthmore 
College,* “Keeping these schools up and running would require ongoing 
financial support. Toward this end, the National Freedman’s Association, in 
collaboration with the American Missionary Association and interested 
officers of the Union Army launched a new propaganda campaign.  Five 
children and three adults, all former slaves from New Orleans, were sent to 
the North on a publicity tour.*
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A full page of Harper’s Weekly’s Jan. 30, 1864 issue was devoted to this 
engraving, which was based on a large-format photograph taken of the 
group.   Explaining the picture was a letter written by  C.C. Leigh 
introducing the stars of the new propaganda campaign.  Pay attention to how 
he keeps emphasizing the intelligence of the children.

*“To the Editor of Harper’s Weekly:*
*The group of emancipated slaves whose portraits I send you were brought by 
Colonel Hanks and Mr. Philip Bacon from New Orleans, where they were set 
free by General Butler…REBECCA HUGER is eleven years old, and was a slave 
in her father’s house, the special attendant of a girl a little older than 
herself.  To all appearance she is perfectly white.  Her complexion, hair 
and features show not the slightest trace of Negro blood.  In the few 
months during which she has been at school she has learned to read well, 
and writes as neatly as most children of her age.  Her mother and 
grandmother live in New Orleans, where they support themselves comfortably 
by their own labor…ROSINA DOWNS is not quite seven years old.  She is a 
fair child, with blonde complexion and silky hair.  Her father is in the 
rebel army.  She has one sister as white as herself and three brothers who 
are darker.  Her mother, a bright mulatto, lives in New Orleans in a poor 
hut, and* *has hard work to support her family.  CHARLES TAYLOR is eight 
years old.  His complexion is very fair, his hair light and silky.  Three 
out of five boys in any school in New York are darker than he.  Yet this 
white boy, with his mother, as he declares, has been twice sold as a 
slave.  First by his father and “owner”,  Alexander Wethers, of Lewis 
County, Virginia, to a slave trader named Harrison, who sold them to 
Mr.Thornhill of New Orleans.  This man fled at the approach of our army and 
his slaves were liberated by General Butler. The boy is decidedly 
intelligent, and though he has been at school less than a year, he reads 
and writes very well. …”*

The letter goes on to describe the adults in the group—two of them chosen, 
evidently, because they had physical scars from their masters’ 
mistreatment.  Wilson Chinn, on the left, was branded on his forehead by 
Volsey B Marmillion, who branded all his 210 slaves, and Mary Johnson 
carried the scars of 50 cuts on her arms and back –given by her master 
because one morning she was “half an hour behind time in bringing up his 
five o’clock cup of coffee”.

The little girl on the left next to Charley was described  as AUGUSTA 
BROUJEY, nine years old. *“Her mother, who is almost white, was owned by 
her half-brother, named Solamon, who still retains two of her children. 
ISAAC WHITE is a black boy of eight years; but none the less intelligent 
than his whiter companions. He has been in school about seven months, and I 
venture to say that not one boy in fifty would have made as much 
improvement in that space of time.”*

The man on the far right is  “the Reverend Mr. Whitehead” who managed to 
earn enough as a house and ship painter to buy his freedom and is described 
thus: “The reverend gentleman can read and write well and is a very 
stirring speaker.  Just now he belongs to the church militant, having 
enlisted in the United States Army.”

The letter in Harper’s ends by telling where the small CDVs of the 
individuals can be bought for 25 cents each or the large photo of the whole 
group for one dollar.  This would have been a very good investment, for 
today the individual CDV’s can cost several hundred dollars or more, and 
the only copy of the large group photo that I have ever seen was in the 
collection of the Metropolitan Museum.

Three photographers took photos of the white slave children: Charles Paxson 
and M. H. Kimball  in New York, and J.E. McClees in Philadelphia (where 
they were kicked out of their hotel when the manager learned they were not 
“really” white.) The children were dressed in elegant clothing and posed 
with props—the American flag, an ornate mirror, books which they were 
studying—to appeal to the sentimentality of Victorian audiences.  (See my 
previous post.)  Kimball produced the most “shocking” photo (to Victorian 
eyes) of dark-skinned Isaac and white-skinned Rosa arm in arm .  (Augusta 
was in only 2 of the 22 photos on record and Isaac in three, but Rosa and 
Rebecca are pictured in most of them.) 
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The most photographed and most popular of the “white slave children” was 
Rebecca, 11 years old, posed in ever more stylish outfits.  Prof. Mary 
Niall Mitchell (who is writing a book about white slave Mary Botts, 
mentioned in my previous post) suggests in an essay “Rosebloom and Pure 
White” in *American Quarterly, Sept. 2002*, that Rebecca fascinated the 
Victorians because she was closest to becoming an adult woman and the 
thought of her  sexual vulnerability —a white slave girl who could be 
bought and sold and raped—fascinated and horrified the 
Northerners.  Clearly the white children were the result of masters raping 
the slave women who were their property. Professor  Mitchell repeats the 
famous quip of southern diarist Mary Chestnut:* “Every lady tells you who 
is the father of all the mulatto children in everybody’s household, but 
those in her own she seems to think drop from the clouds, or pretends so to 
think.”*

Professor Mitchell writes in the same essay: *“In the images of Rosa and 
Rebecca, a notion about white little girls as pure and precious things may 
have been employed to redeem those viewers who had yet to rally around the 
antislavery cause and encourage them to act on the girls’ behalf.”*

Finally, the Abolitionists photographing the “white slave children” were 
using the new and undeniably “scientific”  medium of photography to battle 
the beliefs of the leading scientist of the day—Louis Agassiz—famous 
Harvard natural scientist.  He claimed and tried very hard to prove 
“scientifically” that the Black race was an inferior and separate 
biological species.  According to Kathleen Collins in “Portraits of Slave 
Children” in *“History of Photography”, July- September 1985*,   *“The 
anthropologist Stephen Jay Gould recently reconstructed Agassiz’ life and 
thought from his unexpurgated letters in the Harvard University 
Collection.  Gould concluded that behind Agassiz’ separate creation 
theories was an initial, visceral reaction to contact with blacks, which 
left him with an intense revulsion against the notion of miscegenation.”*

Agassiz himself tried to use the science of photography to promote his 
theories that blacks were a different species from whites.  Long before the 
civil war, he toured Southern plantations and had the owners bring forth 
the most “African” looking slaves.  In 1850 Agassiz arranged for J. T. 
Zealy, a daguerrotypist in Columbia, South Carolina, to take photographs of 
African-born slaves from plantations Agassiz had visited. 
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The slaves were stripped and photographed and these haunting daguerreotypes 
were sent to Agassiz at Harvard.  In 1976 they were found in a storage 
cabinet at the Peabody Museum of Archeology and Ethnology. (To see these 
dags and read a brilliant discussion of Agassiz’s racism and his use of the 
camera to debase his subjects, go to 
http://usslave.blogspot.com/2011/10/black-bodies-white-science-louis.html. 
) Here are two of the captions:

*The Zealy pictures reveal the social convention which ranks blacks as 
inferior beings, which violates civilized decorum, which strips men and 
women of the right to cover their genitalia. And yet the pictures shatter 
that mold by allowing the eyes of Delia and the others to speak directly to 
ours, in an appeal to a shared humanity.*

*Agassiz commissioned these images to use as scientific visual evidence to 
prove the physical difference between white Europeans and black Africans. 
The primary goal was to prove the racial superiority of the white race. The 
photographs were also meant to serve as evidence for his theory of 
“separate creation,” which contends that each race originated as a separate 
species.*

So the Abolitionists who photographed the white (mulatto) children of New 
Orleans, arm in arm with a black slave child, and who emphasized at every 
turn the intelligence and good behavior of these children, were fighting 
fire with fire—using the new science of photography to refute visually the 
beliefs of the country’s most famous scientist and other racists who 
insisted that the two races should not and could not be mixed.

On Monday, May 16, 2016 at 9:25:32 AM UTC-5, Travis wrote:
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