R&M Chapter 2
R&M Chapter 2
R&M Chapter 2
they are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights; that among
Chapter 1 explored the physical characteristics, social ties, and other factors that
shape our identity. The chapter also considered the consequences of the ways we
view the differences between ourselves and others. The readings in Chapter 2
place those ideas in historical perspective by examining how Europeans and
Americans regarded differences in the 1700s and early 1800s. Many of the
beliefs that Americans hold today about race and democracy developed during
those years. It was a time when hundreds of thousands of Africans were brought
to the Americas in chains. Their enslavement had a profound effect on American
attitudes and values then and now. The 1700s and early 1800s were also a time
when some Europeans and Americans participated in an intellectual movement
known as the “Enlightenment.” In 1784, Immanuel Kant described the
“enlightened” as those who “dare to know, to reject the authority of tradition,
and to think and inquire for oneself.” Modern science grew out of the ideals of
the Enlightenment. So did many democratic institutions.
Among those attracted to the Enlightenment were the leaders of the American
Revolution. Indeed, the movement inspired many of the ideas central to citizen-
ship in the United States, including the belief “that all men are created equal.”
Yet it was also the Enlightenment that encouraged the notion that humankind is
divided into distinct and unequal races. It was an idea supported by scientists
who exaggerated the differences between us and them to justify prejudice, dis-
crimination, and slavery.
Many of the readings in this chapter consider not only the tension between
these two contradictory notions about human worth—racism and equality—but
also the consequences of that tension and its effects on the lives of real people
long ago and today. In analyzing their stories, it is important to remember that
the thinkers of the Enlightenment lived at a particular time and in a particular
place. The great events, prejudices, and values of that time and place shaped
thinking, much as they shape thought today. Anne Fausto-Sterling, a professor
of biology and medicine, says of the relationship between science and society:
Aware that their work reflects the values of their society, many scientists today
have come to believe that scientific research is more than a method of inquiry. It
also requires a willingness to challenge dogma and a willingness to see the uni-
verse as it really is. Accordingly, science sometimes requires courage—at the very
least, the courage to question the conventional wisdom. British scientist P. B.
Medawar once wrote of his own research:
Chapter 2 considers what happens to a society when some leading scientists are
unwilling or unable to accept the idea that their hypotheses could possibly be
“mistaken or incomplete.” It also explores how the “twisted science” that results
from such research becomes the “conventional wisdom”—the things we are so
convinced are true that they are rarely if ever challenged.
1. The words men and mankind were commonly used in earlier centuries to refer to humans and
humankind. Their use reflects a particular time period.
2. Myths of Gender by Anne Fausto-Sterling. Revised edition. Basic Books, 1992, pp. 9-10.
3. The Limits of Science by P. B. Medawar. Harper & Row, 1984, p. 101.
Reading 1
In the mid-1700s, a few European thinkers tried to apply the ideas and methods
of science to humans and human societies. These thinkers were part of a move-
ment known as the “Enlightenment.” Although they disagreed on a number of
points, most came to believe that all humans everywhere have the ability to rea-
son and form societies. In time, those theories shaped the way ordinary people
viewed the world. If societies are human inventions, some argued, people may
alter or even replace an oppressive government with one more to their liking. In
1776, thirteen colonies along the eastern coast of North America broke their ties
to Britain. Thomas Jefferson of Virginia wrote their Declaration of
Independence. It states:
The French Revolution was also inspired by the ideals of the Enlightenment. In
1789, in their Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen, the French boldly
stated that “Men are born, and always continue, free and equal in respect of
their rights.” As a French leader explained, “Since men are all made of the same
clay, there should be no distinction or superiority among them.” He and other
thinkers of the Enlightenment regarded human differences as differences in
degree rather than in kind.
CONNECTIONS
What does the idea of equality mean to you? Does the idea that “all men are cre-
ated equal” imply that there are no differences? To what extent have Americans
achieved equality? To what extent does it remain a dream? What is the power of
that dream? How does that dream relate to citizenship?
1. Nature’s Body: Gender in the Making of Science by Londa Schiebinger. Copyright ©1993 by
Londa Schiebinger. Reprinted by permission of Beacon Press, Boston, pp. 143-145.
Reading 2
The previous reading focused on how the great thinkers of the Enlightenment
viewed equality and difference. Their ideas helped shape the way ordinary peo-
ple viewed the world. Ideas are also shaped by the experiences of everyday life.
Jack Foley traces the development of the notion that Europeans are white to the
growth of slavery in the British colonies:
Colonial charters and other official documents written in the 1600s and early
1700s rarely refer to British colonists as white. By the late 1700s, however, the
word was widely used in public documents and private papers. According to
All free white persons who, have, or shall, migrate into the
United States, and shall give satisfactory proof, before a magistrate,
by oath, that they intend to reside therein, and shall take an oath of
allegiance, and shall have resided in the United States for one whole
year, shall be entitled to the rights of citizenship.
Before the law was passed, members of Congress argued over the one-year
requirement, wondered whether Jews and Catholics should be eligible for citi-
zenship, and considered restrictions on the right of immigrants to hold political
office. But no member publicly questioned the idea of limiting citizenship to
only “free white persons.”
Three years before the bill became law, Thomas Jefferson, the author of the
Declaration of Independence, observed in his Notes on the State of Virginia, “It
will probably be asked, Why not retain and incorporate the blacks into the
state?” In response to that question, he advanced “as a suspicion only, that the
blacks, whether originally a distinct race, or made distinct by time and circum-
stances are inferior to whites in the endowments both of body and mind.” He
called for “scientific investigations” but urged that researchers use caution
“where our conclusion would degrade a whole race of men from the rank in the
scale of beings which their Creator may perhaps have given them.”3
Some abolitionists offered Jefferson proof that people of African descent are
equal to whites by citing the achievements of individuals like Benjamin
Banneker, a free black from Maryland. The Georgetown (VA) Weekly Ledger
described him in 1791 as “an Ethiopian whose abilities as surveyor and
astronomer already prove that Mr. Jefferson’s concluding that that race of men
were void of mental endowment was without foundation.”
CONNECTIONS
How was race defined in Chapter 1? How is it defined in this reading? How do
dictionaries define the term? What do you think it means to people in the
United States today? What does it mean to you? How are these various defini-
tions related to the word equal?
By the 1790s, slavery had existed in North America for nearly 200 years. How
do you think the existence of slavery shaped the way Americans defined
equality? Viewed race?
Jack Foley writes, “The only way for the ‘majority’ to conceive itself as a majori-
ty is to conceive of itself as white: without whiteness, there are only ‘minorities.’”
How does he seem to define “whiteness”? How do you define the term?
Thomas Jefferson considered slavery immoral. Yet he was a slaveholder who saw
Africans as a threat to “white racial purity.” In reflecting on efforts to free the
slaves, he wrote, “This unfortunate difference in color, and perhaps of faculty, is
a powerful obstacle to the emancipation of these people.” Despite such beliefs,
Jefferson inspired generations of African Americans. In a speech, civil rights
activist Julian Bond tried to explain why:
What is Bond suggesting about the power of ideas to spark the imagination and
inspire creativity? Are Jefferson’s most famous words the “true measure of the
man” or should he be judged by his deeds? Why do you think some historians
have called Jefferson’s views paradoxical? To what extent did he seem to be aware
of contradictions in his thinking? How did he try to resolve them?
1. The word Negro was commonly used in earlier centuries to refer to individuals of African
descent. Its use reflects a particular time period.
2. “Multiculturism and the Media” by Jack Foley in MultiAmerica: Essays on Cultural Wars and
Cultural Peace, edited by Ishmael Reed. Viking, 1997, pp. 367–369.
3. Notes on the State of Virginia by Thomas Jefferson, edited by William Peden. University of
North Carolina Press, 1982, p. 143.
4. Accounting for Genocide by Helen Fein. Free Press, 1979, p. 4
5. “Address” by Julian Bond. Jefferson Conference, October 16, 1992, pp. 19-20.
Reading 3
Americans were debating the future of slavery and the role of African Americans
in the nation at a time when scientists were trying to understand the world by
naming, sorting, and categorizing every part of it. In the 1730s, Swedish natu-
ralist Carolus Linnaeus devised a system that showed how living things are relat-
ed to one another. Writer Jonathan Weiner notes that Linnaeus’s system is often
drawn as a “tree of life.”
The trunk of the tree divides near its base to form kingdoms,
and each great trunk divides again and again into ever-finer branch-
es and twigs; into species, subspecies, races, varieties, and, at last,
like leaves on the twigs, individuals. We depict the order of life, in
other words, as a family tree, a genealogy, in which the branches
trace back to a common trunk. Every living thing is related, whether
distantly or nearly, and every animal and plant shares the same
ancestors at the root. . . .
But that is not how Linnaeus himself saw his system. To him, and
to other pious naturalists of his generation, . . . they represented the
plan of God, who created the species in a single week, as described
in the first pages of the Hebrew Bible: “And God created great
whales . . . and every winged fowl after his kind: and God saw that
it was good.”
. . . In Linnaeus’s vast botanical collections he did notice many
examples of local plant varieties, variations on a theme. But in his sys-
tem these varieties were not half as significant as true species. . . .
Local varieties were merely instances in which one of the Lord’s created
species had come to be adapted to its particular neighborhood.1
Although Blumenbach regarded Caucasians as the first and most beautiful vari-
ety of humans, he was careful to point out in A Manual of the Elements of
Natural History:
Like Blumenbach, Petrus Camper was also preoccupied with the idea of beauty
and order in the world. Trained as an artist before turning to science, Camper
was a professor of anatomy at the University of Groningen in the Netherlands.
His interest in art and anatomy came together in the illustration on page 45,
which originally appeared in a medical textbook printed in 1791, two years after
his death.
Camper lived at a time when the Dutch were deeply involved in the interna-
tional slave trade. Although Camper was personally opposed to slavery, he was
fascinated by the stories and the artifacts brought home by sailors and mer-
chants involved in the trade. He saw the skeletal remains of animals and
humans from distant lands as pieces of a puzzle—each piece was a clue to a bet-
ter understanding of the order of nature.
As a man of faith, Camper believed in monogenesis, the idea that all people
share a common ancestry, even though, he thought that some groups had drift-
ed further from the Biblical ideal than others. As a man of the Enlightenment,
Camper believed that the world was ordered according to laws that could be dis-
covered through reason and observation and then visually demonstrated. In such
a world, he and others believed that an organism’s “outer state”—its appear-
ance—reflected its “inner state,” its moral or intellectual worth.
Convinced that ancient Greece and Rome had come closer than other
civilizations to perfection, he used Greek statues to establish standards of beauty.
He ranked human faces by how closely they resembled this ideal. After
measuring dozens of statues, Camper found that their “facial angle” averaged
In the late 18th and early 19th centuries, a number of scientists ranked
humankind along a “chain of being” based on Camper’s facial angles. The idea
of a “chain of being” dated back to the Middle Ages but gained new popularity
in the years after Camper’s death. As Kenan Malik explains in The Meaning of
Race, “The Great Chain of Being linked the cosmos from the most miserable
mollusk to the Supreme Being. Near the apex of this chain stood Man, himself
graded by social rank. In this great chain, the humblest as well as the greatest
played their part in preserving order and carrying out God’s bidding.”3
CONNECTIONS
Linnaeus tested the idea that all living things are related to one another. What
ideas were Blumenbach and Camper testing? To what extent were their methods
Linnaeus, Blumenbach, and Camper were all men of faith. How did their reli-
gious beliefs shape their observations of the natural world? What other aspects
of their identity may have influenced the way they viewed differences among
humankind? The value they placed on the similarities among humankind?
Camper called his drawing “The progression of skulls and facial expressions—
from monkey, through black, to the average European and then thence to the
Greek ideal-type.” To what extent does his title support your impressions of the
drawing? What is the significance of the word progression?
What kinds of proofs do you find more powerful—written proofs or visual evi-
dence? Which is more likely to stretch the mind and inspire the imagination?
Which is more difficult to forget? How do you think ideas like those of
Blumenbach and Camper might have influenced people of the time? To what
extent might the mystique of science keep the average person from questioning
their ideas?
1. The Beak of the Finch by Jonathan Weiner. Random House, 1995, pp. 23–24.
2. Quoted in Race and Manifest Destiny by Reginald Horsman. Harvard University Press, 1981, p.
47.
3. The Meaning of Race: Race, History and Culture in Western Society by Kenan Malik. New York
University Press, 1996, p. 43.
Reading 4
Petrus Camper believed in monogenesis, the idea that all people share a com-
mon ancestry based on the Biblical account of Adam and Eve. At the same time,
he was convinced that some groups or “races” had declined further than others
from their Biblical origin. He also suspected that there were intellectual and
moral differences among the races as well as physical ones. In the mid-19th
century, an American anthropologist, Samuel George Morton, extended
Camper’s work. But unlike Camper, Morton believed in polygenesis—the idea
that each race was created separately. He also maintained that each race is fixed,
intrinsically different from all others, and incapable of being changed.
Europeans
The Caucasian Race is characterized by a naturally fair skin, suscepti-
ble of every tint; hair fine, long and curling, and of various colors.
The skull is large and oval, and its anterior portion full and elevated.
The face is small in proportion to the head, of an oval form, with well-
proportioned features. . . . This race is distinguished for the facility
with which it attains the highest intellectual endowments. . . .
The spontaneous fertility of [the Caucasus] has rendered it the
hive of many nations, which extending their migrations in every direc-
tion, have peopled the finest portions of the earth, and given birth to
its fairest inhabitants. . . .
Asians
This great division of the human species is characterized by a sallow
Native Americans
The American Race is marked by a brown complexion; long, black,
lank hair; and deficient beard. The eyes are black and deep set, the
brow low, the cheek-bones high, the nose large and aquiline, the
mouth large, and the lips tumid [swollen] and compressed. . . . In
their mental character the Americans are averse to cultivation, and
slow in acquiring knowledge; restless, revengeful, and fond of war,
and wholly destitute of maritime adventure.
They are crafty, sensual, ungrateful, obstinate and unfeeling,
and much of their affection for their children may be traced to purely
selfish motives. They devour the most disgusting [foods] uncooked
and uncleaned, and seem to have no idea beyond providing for the
present moment. . . . Their mental faculties, from infancy to old age,
present a continued childhood. . . . [Indians] are not only averse to
the restraints of education, but for the most part are incapable of a
continued process of reasoning on abstract subjects. . . .
Africans
Characterized by a black complexion, and black, woolly hair; the
eyes are large and prominent, the nose broad and flat, the lips thick,
and the mouth wide; the head is long and narrow, the forehead low,
the cheek-bones prominent, the jaws protruding, and the chin small.
In disposition the Negro is joyous, flexible, and indolent; while the
many nations which compose this race present a singular diversity of
intellectual character, of which the far extreme is the lowest grade of
humanity. . . .
The moral and intellectual character of the Africans is widely
different in different nations. . . . The Negroes are proverbially fond
of their amusements, in which they engage with great exuberance of
spirit; and a day of toil is with them no bar to a night of revelry.
Morton’s ranking of the “races” had very real consequences. After meeting
Morton and viewing his skull collection, Louis Agassiz, a noted biologist who
joined the faculty of Harvard University in 1846, taught his students that
Africans are a separate species. In evaluating Agassiz’s career, anthropologist Lee
D. Baker observes: “Agassiz’s legacy is not only the statues, schools, streets, and
museums in Cambridge [Massachusetts] emblazoned with his name but also the
bevy of students who were under his tutelage at Harvard University. He trained
virtually all of the prominent U.S. professors of natural history during the sec-
ond half of the nineteenth century.”3
Morton’s rankings also shaped the way many politicians, journalists, and minis-
ters viewed two of the most pressing social and political issues of the day: the
expulsion of Native Americans from their ancestral lands and the expansion of
slavery. Between 1816 and 1850, over 100,000 Indians from 28 tribes were
forced from their homes east of the Mississippi to western lands that white
Americans considered useless. At the same time, about 3.5 million African
Americans were held in bondage. Their enslavement prompted a heated debate
between slave-owners and an international community of abolitionists, oppo-
nents to slavery. Morton’s writings played a part in both debates by promoting
the idea that the Constitution does not apply to Native Americans or Africans
because they are not the sorts of people for whom the document was written.
CONNECTIONS
List the adjectives Morton uses to define each of the four groups. Circle every
adjective that has a positive connotation. Is there a correlation between the
number of positive adjectives that Morton uses in describing a group and his
estimate of its moral or intellectual “worth”?
What do you think Morton meant when he wrote that Africans “yield to their
What power do teachers have to shape the way their students view the world?
What power do parents have? A community? Religious leaders? To what extent
did teachers like Morton and Agassiz betray their students?
The link Morton and others saw between brain size and intelligence shaped
ideas about not only African Americans and Native Americans but also women.
In 1879, Gustave Le Bon, a French student of anthropology, wrote:
Define the word scientific. Are scientific proofs more convincing than other
proofs? How difficult are they to counter? For example, how might a woman
“prove” that she is the equal of a man? How do you think Le Bon would
respond to her proof? How might an African American “prove” that he or she is
the equal of any other American? How do you think Morton, Le Bon, and oth-
ers would respond to that proof?
1. Quoted in The Leopard’s Spots: Scientific Attitudes Towards Race in America, 1815–1859 by W.
Stanton. University of Chicago Press, 1960, p. 144.
2. Crania Americana by Samuel George Morton. John Pennington, 1839. pp. 5, 6, 50, 54, 81.
3. From Savage to Negro: Anthropology and the Construction of Race, 1896-1954 by Lee D. Baker.
University of California Press, 1998, p.16.
4. Quoted in The Mismeasure of Man by Stephen Jay Gould. W.W. Norton, 1981, pp. 104–105.
Reading 5
Notice that the number of skulls varies from group to group. Morton
measured “cranial capacity”—the interior size of the skull—in cubic
inches.
In the mid-1800s, however, most scientists accepted both the methods and the
data Morton used to arrive at his conclusions. Among the few to raise questions
was Friedrich Tiedemann, a German professor who also used skulls to investi-
gate the ways race, intelligence, and brain size are linked. According to The Skull
Measurer’s Mistake by Sven Lindqvist, Tiedemann measured skulls by filling
them with millet, then weighing the millet. The largest skull in his collection
held 59 ounces. It was from a Native American man. The second largest was
from a white man. Third was an African, fourth a white, and fifth place was
shared by three whites, a Mongol, and a Malay. The largest female skull came
from a Malay woman, whose cranium held 41 ounces. A white and a Native
American shared second place, and one black and one white woman shared
third place. These results did not support Morton’s conclusion. Nor did they fit
the race hierarchy of Tiedemann’s time, in which whites were always at the top
and blacks at the bottom.
CONNECTIONS
What does it mean for a human being to be measured, ranked, and then
labeled? Does it matter who does the measuring? What is the difference between
being ranked by a scientist or a teacher? By a relative or a friend? Which has a
greater impact on the way you see yourself and others?
To evaluate a scientific finding, it is important that the data be not only accurate
but also relevant to the question under investigation. How would you determine
the accuracy of Morton’s data? How relevant are Morton’s measurements to the
qualities he ascribes to the various “racial groups” (Reading 4)?
The mean is the average—the sum of all of the items divided by the number of
items or in this case, the number of skulls. What conclusions about cranial
capacity does the “Mean” column in Morton’s table suggest?
Despite these errors, Gould does not think that Morton intended to deceive
anyone. If that had been his intention, he probably would have tried to cover up
his data and hide his procedures. How would you account for Morton’s errors?
What does Gould’s study suggest about the ways unconscious assumptions may
affect one’s objectivity?
What similarities do you notice in the ways Morton and Tiedemann approached
their research? What differences seem most striking? How important are those
differences?
Tiedemann came to believe that there is no relationship between skull size and
intelligence as a result of his study of dolphins. He found that the size of a dol-
phin’s brain varies with gender, body length, body weight, and body condition
but not with intelligence. His work with dolphins also taught Tiedemann “not
only to study averages in large groups, but also to take an interest in individuals
and the variations between individuals as well as between groups and divisions
of groups.” What may a study of averages in large groups reveal? What may it
conceal? What may a study of individuals and the variations among them
reveal? What may such a study conceal?
1. The Life and Writings of Frederick Douglass, Vol. 2. Edited by Philip S. Forer. International
Publishing, 1950, p. 298.
2. Paraphrased from Mismeasure of Man by Stephen Jay Gould. W.W. Norton & Co., 1996, 1981,
pp. 100-101.
Reading 6
By the middle of the 1800s, the idea that some “races” are superior to others had
become the “conventional wisdom.” Respected scientists like Samuel Morton
gave racism legitimacy. As a result, racist ideas were taught in universities,
preached from pulpits, and reinforced in books, magazines, and newspapers.
After surveying the leading publications of the day, historian Reginald Horsman
notes, “One did not have to read obscure books to know that the Caucasians
were innately superior, and that they were responsible for civilization in the
world, or to know that inferior races were destined to be overwhelmed or even to
disappear. These ideas permeated the main American periodicals and in the sec-
ond half of the century formed part of the accepted truth of America’s school-
books.” 1 They also shaped the way Americans defined citizenship.
In 1857, the language of exclusion reached the Supreme Court. In the Dred
Scott decision, Chief Justice Roger B. Taney ruled that blacks “had no rights
which the white man was bound to respect.” The American people, Taney
argued, constituted a “political family” restricted to whites. Historian Eric Foner
notes, “It was a family of which blacks, descended from different ancestors and
lacking a history of freedom, could never be a part. In effect, race had replaced
class as the boundary separating which American men were entitled to enjoy
political freedom and which were not.”2
As race increasingly defined citizenship, free blacks in the North and West as
well as the South found themselves outside the nation’s “universe of obligation.”
When they looked for work on the docks of New York City, they were attacked
by white workers. When young African Americans applied for the apprentice-
ships that would lead to good jobs in places like Cincinnati, Ohio, white
mechanics blocked their every attempt. As one young black man complained,
“Why should I strive hard and acquire all the constituents of a man, if the
prevailing genius of the land admit me not as such, or but in an inferior degree!
Even the most educated African Americans experienced hostility, prejudice, and
discrimination at every turn. Historian Ronald Takaki relates the experiences of
Martin Delany, the son of a slave father and free mother in Charles Town,
Virginia (now Charleston, West Virginia), to suggest the breadth and depth of
the shame and humiliation African Americans experienced in all parts of the
nation in the early 1800s.
CONNECTIONS
A young African American quoted in this reading asks, “What are my prospects?
To what shall I turn my hand?” How do you think Samuel Morton and other
“race scientists” would answer his questions? How might Martin Delany answer
them? How would you answer them? To what extent do Samuel Morton’s rank-
ings place that young man and other African Americans beyond the nation’s
“universe of obligation”? What does Martin Delany’s story suggest about the
consequences of being outside a nation’s universe of obligation?
How do you explain the change from a society that emphasizes equality to one
that stresses differences? What role may education have played in that change?
1. Race and Manifest Destiny by Reginald Horsman. Harvard University Press, 1981, p. 157.
2. The Story of American Freedom by Eric Foner. W.W. Norton & Company, 1998, pp. 74–75.
3. Quoted in North from Slavery by Leon Litvak. Chicago, 1965, pp. 153-154.
4. A Different Mirror by Ronald Takaki. Copyright © 1993 by Ronald Takaki. By permission of
Little, Brown and Company, 1993, pp. 127-128.
Reading 7
Among the few Americans in the early 1800s to keep alive the language of the
Declaration of Independence were abolitionists—those who sought to end slav-
ery in the nation. Although many of them did not believe that “all men are
born equal,” their long struggle to abolish slavery gave new meaning to personal
liberty and the rights attached to citizenship.
In the 1830s, writes historian Eric Foner, politicians and ordinary citizens tried
to silence those who were critical of slavery. In northern cities, mobs broke up
the meetings of abolitionist societies and destroyed their printing presses. In
1836, the U.S. House of Representatives refused to consider any petition that
called for the abolition of slavery. At about the same time, Postmaster General
Amos Kendall allowed U.S. postal officials in southern states to remove from the
mail any written material critical of slavery. Foner argues:
The fight for the right to debate slavery openly and without
reprisal led abolitionists to elevate “free opinion”—freedom of speech
and of the press and the right of petition—to a central place in what
[William Lloyd] Garrison called the “gospel of freedom.” The struggle
for free speech also reinforced the contention that slavery threatened
the liberties of white Americans as well as black. Free expression,
abolitionists insisted, should be a national standard, not subject to lim-
itation by those who held power within local communities.1
The struggle against slavery also inspired two definitions of citizenship. One was
based on race. The other was based on a civic understanding of nationhood. It
was summarized by Lydia Maria Child in 1833 in a popular essay entitled “An
Appeal in Favor of that Class of Americans Called Africans.” Foner writes:
CONNECTIONS
Nations, like individuals, have an identity. Make an identity chart for the
United States in 1776. What values and beliefs were central to the nation’s iden-
tity? What changes were Americans making in that chart in the early 1800s? In
1860? What might such a chart look like today?
What motive does Douglass attribute to those who want to “read the Negro out
of the human family”? What does he consider the logical result of a belief in
polygenesis?
In 1861, the United States fought a civil war over the right of African Americans
to be free—to be part of the “human family.” When the Civil War ended in
1865, the nation added three amendments to the Constitution. The Thirteenth
Amendment ended slavery. Research the Fourteenth and Fifteenth amendments.
What was the goal of each amendment? Why do many constitutional experts
regard the Fourteenth as the more revolutionary of the two?
People often think of a historical event in terms of a simple cause and an imme-
diate effect. How does the long crusade against slavery complicate that view? To
more fully appreciate its legacies, you may want to investigate the history of the
Civil Rights Movement or of particular groups like the National Association for
the Advancement of Colored People or the American Civil Liberties Union.
1. The Story of American Freedom by Eric Foner. W.W. Norton & Company, 1998, pp. 85-86.
2. Ibid., p. 86
3. “The Claims of the Negro Ethnologically Considered” by Frederick Douglass. Excerpts from an
address delivered at Western Reserve College, July 12, 1854.