Tuesday, January 10, 2023

1854: Jailed For Teaching Free Black Children

 


Jan. 10, 1854, Judge Richard H. Baker wanted to make an example of Mrs. Margret Douglas for having the audacity to teach free Black children to read, so he gave her a month in jail, which he considered lenient because she was a woman.

Douglas had been arrested in May of 1953 for the depraved educational crime when two Norfolk policemen entered her classroom. They took her and her daughter and the 25 children to the mayor's office where she was told her teaching was illegal, she argued then that she was only doing what the church was doing. The mayor released everyone, and Douglas thought the incident was over. She sent her daughter to visit family in New York for the summer. Then in June the city of Norfolk sent Douglas a summons to appear in court for her crime.

In November she reported to the court and functioned as her own attorney. Her defense was mostly based on the fact the Christ Church was teaching the same lessons she was. While this was entirely true the jury did not think much of it and the jury found Douglas guilty and their recommendation was a fine of $1. The judge postponed sentencing until January.

At the sentencing, Judge Richard Baker went over Douglas’s defense and stated he found it all improper and stated that the church was only teaching the necessary moral teachings and that helping free Blacks become literate was a danger to everyone in the community. In his sentencing, Baker defended slavery as part of the natural order and railed against “Northern radicals” for their interference in Southern life. He then told Douglass how he was tempted to give her the full sentence of a $100 fine and six months in jail but because she was a woman he had determined one month was enough to show the public not to violate the laws of Virginia.

The newspapers of the time were not kind to Douglass. They described her as a “dangerous white woman” and an “intrepid female.” The Norfolk Argus bid her good riddance by writing, “Let her depart hence with only one wish, that her presence will never be intruded upon us again.”

Upon release, Douglass moved to Philadelphia with her daughter and wrote a book on her experience and defending her actions. In her memoir of the experience, Douglass mentioned how she believed Caucasians were superior to Blacks. In court, she had admitted to previously owning a slave and would not commit to never doing so again. However bold Mrs. Douglass was her case is primarily representative of the White Supremacist Culture of the antebellum south even in the cities 




Sources:

https://digitalcommons.liberty.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1028&context=ljh




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