Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

“Never Forget: They Kept Lots of Slaves” (the Founding Fathers)
NRO ^ | 12/29/2003 | Michael Knox Beran

Posted on 12/28/2003 9:51:37 PM PST by Utah Girl

The latest maneuver in the culture wars, and how it is distorting our thinking about the Founding Fathers.

It was bound to happen sooner or later. Each new book on the founding of our republic might as well contain the scholarly equivalent of the surgeon general’s warning affixed to our beer bottles. "Warning: Studying the Men Who Founded the United States May Be Dangerous to Your Moral Health."

Nothing short of the most drastic measures could put a stop to what (in the view of some of our media and scholarly big shots) is a highly unfortunate development. What has so exasperated the intellectual classes? This — the fact that during the last decade or so the Founding Fathers have begun to be treated by a number of historians in an uncharacteristic way: with respect. Even veneration, of the kind traditionally accorded to lawgivers who found great cities or republics.

For a certain kind of academic historian or debunking journalist nothing could be more insupportable than this notion of the Great Man, the Heroic Founder. What, the outraged professor or muckraking editorial writer wonders, has gone wrong? How, in so up-to-date an age as our own, could some very dead white males manage to be so...popular?

Our friends have nevertheless found a way to stamp out this resurgence of barbarism. As a strategy in the culture wars, their maneuver is a brilliant one.

The cover of the December 14, 2003, issue of The New York Times Book Review sums up the matter with a certain blunt beauty: "Never Forget: They Kept Lots of Slaves." "They," of course, refers to the slave-owning Founders; but the crucial word is "never." Slavery, we are given to understand, is now the sine qua non of scholarly discourse about the Founding Fathers; and we are instructed to apply to the slave-owning Founders the same motto many people (quite rightly and prudently) have heretofore used in connection with the Nazis: "Never forget."

Is this not brilliant? For you see if slavery becomes the principal moral yardstick by which we measure the Founding Fathers, a number of them must automatically be reduced to the status of scoundrels. Weighed in the balance of slavery alone, Washington, Jefferson, and Madison must all be accounted morally worthless, for whatever their differences, each of them owned and exploited slaves.

Yet it is not only the Big Three southerners who must forfeit their claims to veneration; so, too, must those non-slaveholders who drafted, defended, or ratified the Constitution. For they played a part in the creation of a document that condoned slavery, one that took slaves into account in determining state representation in the House of Representatives and the Electoral College.

According to the Times, "new books on the founding fathers put slavery at the center of the story of early America." In fact, of the five books on various Founders reviewed in the December 14 issue of the Book Review, only two, Henry Wiencek’s An Imperfect God and Garry Wills’s "Negro President, can be said to put slavery at the "center" of the early American story. But the lesson to be drawn is clear: Henceforth slavery will be at the center of the story, like it or not. Books that explore other aspects of the Founding will be marginalized, criticized for failing to address the "central" question of the republic’s early years. A new litmus test has been established, one that is likely to have a profound effect on our view of the nation’s Founding.

In fairness it must be said that the Times is merely reporting a trend in historical writing about the Founders. The trend has been especially evident in scholarly work on Thomas Jefferson. In contemporary Jeffersonian studies the unproven assertion that Jefferson sired some or all of Sally Hemings’s children has come to overshadow all other aspects of the man’s life and work.

But there are indications that the same distorting lens through which Jefferson has been viewed will now be used to examine other Founders. Even non-academic historians are beginning to get the message: Put slavery at the "center" of the story or else. Put slavery at the center of the story or face the wrath of the Times’s point-man on the editorial page, Brent Staples. Reasonable people — and reasonable historians — disagree about just how much recent DNA studies really tell us about a possible sexual relationship between Thomas Jefferson and his slave, Sally Hemings. But Mr. Staples, in a Times editorial in July 2002, dismissed those historians who question whether Jefferson and Hemings engaged in a sexual relationship as "[d]ie-hard critics....embarked on a kind of holy crusade." Mr. Staples, for his part, has no patience with the skeptics. In the "new DNA-driven rethinking of history," he wrote, "Hemings can no longer be reduced to a mere courtesan."

Well, actually, the new "DNA-driven rethinking" doesn’t even establish that Hemings was Thomas Jefferson’s courtesan, though some historians have drawn that conclusion. Mr. Staples nevertheless praised those historians who "have shifted their attentions to a woman who was once considered a cipher but has now moved to center stage in America’s longest running domestic drama." Put slavery at the center of the stage, or don’t bother putting on a performance at all.

Do not misunderstand me. The question of slavery in the early republic should be studied. But make no mistake about the motives of those who are instituting the new gag-rule designed to marginalize books that deal with other aspects of the foundation of the republic. These self-appointed censors are less interested in encouraging the pursuit of historical truth than they are in finding new ways to undermine the moral legitimacy of a country many of whose qualities they abhor.

In their new book In Denial: Historians, Communism & Espionage, John Earl Haynes and Harvey Klehr describe the activities of a corps of zealots in the academy who continue to extenuate the sins of Soviet Communists and their followers in the United States. If these scholars are determined to make light of Communism’s sins, a number of their brother scholars are doing their best to tarnish America’s virtues. There is no better way to do this than through a strategy which, if unchallenged, will slowly but inevitably turn the Founding Fathers into the Founding Jerks.

* * * *

Am I exaggerating the threat to the study of the Founders? Possibly; but take a look at the way scholars treated the founding of the republic during much of the last century, and you may begin to agree with me that wariness is justified.

At the beginning of the 20th-century Progressive historians (such as Charles A. Beard) argued that George Washington and his friends were mountebanks, tightfisted swindlers eager to make a buck speculating in land and securities. In the middle of the last century Marxist and quasi-Marxist historians (such as Richard Hofstadter) clothed the Progressive thesis in a more becoming Marxian dress. In his book The American Political Tradition Hofstadter criticized the Founders for failing to develop "a means by which [our] society may transcend eternal conflict and rigid adherence to property rights as its integrating principles." Madison, poor man, didn’t see a way to the dialectical synthesis Hofstadter envisioned, a new science that would abolish private property and usher in the post-capitalist state. Lenin, one is left to suppose, was the more insightful statesman.

Then came the 1960s. A new generation of historians came of professional age. They praised the Founding Fathers for dallying with Greco-Roman notions of public virtue, the severe and stoical virtus suitable to a free republic. These historians cared little enough for the rigorous virtue of the Catos, those stuffy old Romans; but the idea that an earlier generation of Americans had united in the pursuit of a common good was for the rising professors a useful one, for it allowed them to damn the selfish and acquisitive habits of modern Americans, those boring Organization Men who labored in the vineyards of General Motors and AT&T.

According to the historical fable that gained credence in the late Sixties and early Seventies, once upon a time Americans came together to create a Republic of Virtue. Here every man, eschewing the pursuit of private interest, would devote himself to the common weal. But then the haughty Federalist princes marched in and spoiled the fun. Sensing a threat both to their property and their prerogative, the high-born gentlemen put an end to the little experiment in selfless utopianism. The Federalists who gathered at Philadelphia in 1787 to draft a new charter for the United States not only managed to scrap the good old Articles of Confederation (which, we are assured, really weren’t so bad), they imposed on the nation a draconian Constitution that forever enshrined the pursuit of private interest (in part by artfully balancing one interest against another, the thesis advanced by Madison in his tenth Federalist paper). The Federalists, in other words, sold the Republic of Virtue short. What was worse, they had the temerity to invoke "We the People" in justifying their coup d’etat.

History, however, was working against the academic historians’ ideal of a virtuous commonwealth. The Berlin Wall fell; Marx was relegated to history’s ash heap; and all at once the Founders’ "rigid adherence to property rights" no longer appeared as sad and bizarre as it had to Dick Hofstadter. When fresh evidence of Communist atrocities was discovered in the Soviet archives in the 1990s, the Founders’ Bill of Rights started to look positively wonderful. The ingenious blend of liberty and order that went into the making of the American republic appeared rather as a cause for celebration than grumbling. How, one wondered, had the Founders done it?

A number of historians, many of them unaffiliated with the academy, began to reexamine the Founders’ achievement. In their different ways Richard Brookhiser, David McCullough, and Walter Isaacson have described the strengths of character that underlay the achievements of Washington, Hamilton, Adams, and Franklin. Abjuring academic jargon, they set forth their heroes’ virtues in plain English. (And yet to be perfectly fair to Dick Hofstadter, he had a fine and rather elegant English prose-style.)

What was the (more or less) anti-American (or mildly socialist) academic historian to do, now that the Founders were again respectable, even admirable, figures? A number of them tried to revive the moribund Marx. In her Anson G. Phelps Lectures, published as Capitalism and a New Social Order: The Republican Vision of the 1790s, Joyce Appleby noted that Jefferson and his followers were essentially capitalists, committed to liberty of trade. The typical Jeffersonian, she observed, believed that the free market was a good thing. "Capitalism," she said, "thus disclosed itself in a benign and visionary way to Republicans who drew from its dynamic operation the promise of a new age for ordinary men."

One might conclude from this (Appleby’s writing is a shade more opaque than Hofstadter’s) that the professor was sympathetic to the Jeffersonian faith in free markets. Not a bit of it. The Jeffersonian "vision of a free society of independent men prospering through an expansive commerce" was, she argued, "short-lived." It was also, in her estimation, short-sighted. As the nation prospered, "the growth of industry strengthened the tendency of capitalism to divide workers and employers." Despite the "persistent appeal of Jeffersonian idealism in the United States," its free-market economics were a mistake. "In so thoroughly embracing the liberal position on private property and economic freedom," Appleby wrote, "the Jeffersonians seemed unable to envision a day when the free exercise of men’s wealth-creating talents would produce its own class-divided society. Marx’s statement that men and women can only solve the problems history sets before them comes to mind."

No use, then, looking to the Jeffersonian ideal of a free society for inspiration today — or so Appleby informs us: "To study the exact nature of the capitalist underpinnings of our nation’s first popular political movement at the turn of the nineteenth century...teaches us that we at the turn of the twenty-first century must look elsewhere for our principle of hope."

Professor Appleby, for her part, might look elsewhere for a "principle of hope" in the struggle to overthrow the cruelties of capitalism; but how were other Americans, innocent of the Leftish aspirations of the academy, to be persuaded to follow her example and turn away from the example of the Founders? We now have the answer. In the past the Founders’ acquisitiveness appeared to many historians to be their chief weakness, but today’s scholars have come to see that slavery is their most obvious soft spot. And many of these scholars are determined to exploit the vulnerability.

* * * *

The incessant repetition of the mantra, "Never Forget: They Kept Lots of Slaves," will almost certainly have what lawyers call a "chilling effect" on historical inquiry in the years to come. Students in college and graduate school will quickly see, when they come to choose topics for honors theses and dissertations, where the road to honor and profit lies. Professors will tailor their lectures — and conform their monographs — to the newest canon in the P.C. code. Want to trace the evolution of Whig ideals of liberty into a modern philosophy of free-market liberalism? Interested in studying the Founders’ views about natural law? The relation between church and state? Freedom of contract? Or are you simply curious to know more about how the Founders formed themselves into men capable of creating the freest and most durable republic the world has yet seen? Go ahead and follow your interests, but don’t expect to get funding, a teaching position, or a fair hearing for your work.

The cumulative effect of the new mandate to put slavery "at the center of the story of early America" is likely to be devastating. Imagine if, in the centuries after the fall of Athens, the West had concentrated single-mindedly on the fact — quite undeniable — that the Greeks kept slaves. Imagine if every book that appeared on Plato, Aristotle, and Sophocles put at "the center of the story" the sin of Greek slavery. If the mantra "Never Forget: They Kept Lots of Slaves" had been applied to the Greeks as rigorously as it is now to be applied to the American Founders, Saint Augustine would never have happened. Neither would Aquinas have emerged, in any form remotely resembling the one we know. The same goes for Dante, Petrarch, the Renaissance, vast chunks of our inheritance.

Slavery is a great evil; and Lincoln was right to say that if slavery is not wrong, nothing is wrong. But the new litmus test being foisted upon us does little to help us understand the nature and extent of slavery’s evil — or any other evil. The new standard is in its own way a narrow and bigoted one, unequal to the complexity of the human psyche, its apparently unlimited capacity for good and for evil. The souls of Founders are as complicated as those of other people; and they deserve to be the subject of a higher conversation than that which is now coming to prevail.

Michael Knox Beran is the author of Jefferson’s Demons: Portrait of a Restless Mind and The Last Patrician: Bobby Kennedy and the End of American Aristocracy.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: counterhistory; diversity; founders; foundingfathers; multiculturalism; postmodernism; presentism; revisionism; rewritinghistory; slavery; slaves
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-2021-4041-6061-67 next last

1 posted on 12/28/2003 9:51:38 PM PST by Utah Girl
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

To: Utah Girl; mhking; rdb3
ping
2 posted on 12/28/2003 9:54:28 PM PST by farmfriend ( Isaiah 55:10,11)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Utah Girl
Bump
3 posted on 12/28/2003 10:06:30 PM PST by stands2reason
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Utah Girl
Will they mention that Western, "white" culture is the *ONLY* culture to have outlawed slavery?
4 posted on 12/28/2003 10:10:55 PM PST by Guillermo (It's tough being a Miami Dolphins fan)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Utah Girl
read later - FOUNDERS
5 posted on 12/28/2003 10:11:46 PM PST by LiteKeeper
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Guillermo
Exactly right. They forget that tiny little detail, and ignore the countries that still allow slavery, like the Sudan.
6 posted on 12/28/2003 10:12:33 PM PST by Utah Girl
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 4 | View Replies]

To: Utah Girl
The author of this piece of mush might benefit by reading what Thomas Sowell has to say about slavery.
7 posted on 12/28/2003 10:18:19 PM PST by edger (he)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Utah Girl
I would venture to say there is governmentally condoned slavery in the vast majority of countries on earth.

In just about every African nation, in every Arab nation, and every Asian ation with the exception of Japan and Singapore, slavery exists.
8 posted on 12/28/2003 10:18:43 PM PST by Guillermo (It's tough being a Miami Dolphins fan)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 6 | View Replies]

To: Utah Girl
Exactly right. They forget that tiny little detail, and ignore the countries that still allow slavery, like the Sudan.

Bingo!! Our past history with slavery should never be forgotten nor should it be used as a crutch. You would think that emphasis would be placed on the obliteration of slavery in our current world instead of crying over the past.

9 posted on 12/28/2003 10:23:41 PM PST by armymarinemom (My Son Liberated the Honor Roll Students in Iraq)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 6 | View Replies]

To: Guillermo
Don't rush to judgement re: japan and Singapore.....
10 posted on 12/28/2003 10:32:25 PM PST by tracer
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 8 | View Replies]

Comment #11 Removed by Moderator

To: Utah Girl
"Never Forget: They Kept Lots of Slaves,"

IIRC, so did Mohammed.

And he is worshipped.

Becki

12 posted on 12/28/2003 10:49:09 PM PST by Becki (Pray continually for our leaders and our troops!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Utah Girl
Not all of the Founding Fathers kept slaves. John Adams never had slaves. Ben Franklin had a couple but freed them during his lifetime and became an abolitionist. Many of the others freed theirs upon their death, e.g. George Washington.

Slavery, of course, was a very ugly thing, but the abolitionist movement didn't really get going until around 1787, so I think it's unrealistic to judge the Founding Fathers against that movement until it became well established, but certainly by the time the Constitution was drafted and ratified, there was strong public sentiment against slavery, especially in the North.

So I think it's fair to examine the lives of our Founding Fathers and the way they dealt with such an important moral issue of their day. Some come off rather well. Jefferson, in contrast, comes across quite badly. He was unable to free his slaves because he lived beyond his means and died in terrible debt.

As much as I love old Tom, he was a terrible humbug sometimes.
13 posted on 12/28/2003 11:07:25 PM PST by CobaltBlue
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Utah Girl
"Never Forget: They Kept Lots of Slaves"
"Never Forget: Their Genius Freed all Slaves"

14 posted on 12/28/2003 11:12:18 PM PST by William Terrell (Individuals can exist without government but government can't exist without individuals.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Utah Girl
Never forget: Jesse Jackson, Sharpton, and others who race-bait like this are a bunch of @$$holes.

Also, never forget that the slaves who were imported to America were captured by other blacks.

15 posted on 12/28/2003 11:15:49 PM PST by Othniel (That slamming sound you hear is millions of liberals minds that say they're "open.")
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Utah Girl
"Never forget: They Killed Millions of Infants" (Liberals)

Qwinn
16 posted on 12/28/2003 11:27:47 PM PST by Qwinn
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Utah Girl
"Never Forget: They Kept Lots of Slaves” (the Founding Fathers"

The entire article is completely irrelevant and has no bearing on the subject at the moment.

Slavery has been against the law since any living person can remember. What happened back then, NO ONE can help now...no one, not even the Holier-than-thou liberals and libertarians can GO BACK and change anything.

This is another in the long succession of democRAT playbook ploys to:

a) try to distort history, and re-write it to suit their particular purposes of inciting discontent amongst African Americans...none of whom were slaves are even still living.

b) another frail attempt at piling more guilt on all persons of caucasion descent for slave ownership from over 200 years ago.

It's a bad way to put it, but that is the way things were done in those days. There was even slavery up north, as well.

Many things were accepted during different time frames of history, and we were not there to be able to judge it now. Remember when smoking was "in vogue"? In the 50's and 60's, if you DIDN'T smoke, you were an outsider.

I once heard that "...all races have had their Kings, and all races have had their Slaves..." I'm sure there is some truth in that. But you never hear this in the selective history re-writes of the liberals.

As we fall head long into being a "Nanny State", one of the tricks of an old Nanny seems to be in effect...the "guilt trip". Liberals push for their way by telling us things like, it will be OUR fault if the Earth perishes from GLOBAL WARMING. Or, Old folks will have to eat DOG FOOD if we don't pass the latest handout bill in Congress.

Then, if it's not a "gonna do" guilt trip, it's a historic guilt trip...like in the article of question.

The one that really floors me is the new and ultimate love for all things European. We fought and died to get out of Europe and discover America. To get to things like the now-abused FREEDOM OF RELIGION, etc., (notice that is not Freedom FROM Religion). Then we fought and died on more than one occasion to protect and liberate a lot of those countries...who have now turned on us. BUt the libs think we should STRIVE to be just like Europe. Whaaaaa?

Well, I'm suffering from liberal fatigue, and all of their sophmoric ideas and ideals. Most of their theories and ideas are college clap-trap which includes only plans for their continued wealth and power, and NOT what is good for America.

I think it's time for someone to stand up, with a National Megaphone, and tell them to shut the hell up. What they are saying and doing is - IMHO - Un-American...even treasonous. Most of the media in this country report like they just got off the boat from Russia and a Pravda job over there. The media in America has become a mouthpiece for the liberals - because most of the media is made up of liberals.

YES - liberals and minorities of America...people, INCLUDING OUR FOUNDING FATHERS - owned Slaves way back then. Now, we all know it, and we feel a momentary collective sigh about it. BUT, WE CAN'T CHANGE IT. Civil Rights didn't come into play until the 1960's.

My question is to the liberals...if slavery way back then was so unacceptable, why didn't your 1776 counterparts protest against it and cause some societal change?

Why did it take you LIBERALS 200 years to get civil rights laws enacted and enforced? Didn't you liberals CARE about the Slaves back then. Oh...wait...MAYBE because it was part of the American (and other countries) scene back then...(Gosh, can I really say it?)...maybe...maybe...LIBERALS ACCEPTED SLAVERY TOO...WAY BACK THEN.

Nahhh...couldn't be...we know that libs are morally superior to everyone...retroactive back to the beginning of time...oops...s'cuse me...I mean the beginning of evolution. Rant off
17 posted on 12/28/2003 11:46:58 PM PST by FrankR
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Utah Girl
Why is it that the people who are so eager to forgive the 9/11 terrorists are the same ones who spent the rest of their time giving birth to broken glass over stuff that happened TWO CENTURIES AGO?

Once again, their anti-Americanism shines through all the bull****.
18 posted on 12/29/2003 12:05:05 AM PST by Prime Choice (Americans are a spiritual people. We're happy to help members of al Qaeda meet God.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Utah Girl
NEVER FORGET -- LIBERALS WERE APOLOGISTS FOR SOVIET IMPERIALISM AND COMMUNIST MASS MURDER

NEVER FORGET -- THE NEW YORK TIMES WAS A PROPAGANDA ORGAN FOR STALIN COURTESY OF COMRADE DURANTY.
19 posted on 12/29/2003 12:10:20 AM PST by CaptIsaacDavis (.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: CaptIsaacDavis
I hate revisionist historians.

They're one of the main reasons I studied history in college and am planning to go for my M.A. starting next year and one of these days my PhD.

20 posted on 12/29/2003 12:18:39 AM PST by COEXERJ145
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 19 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-2021-4041-6061-67 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson