In the Balance of Power. Omar H. Ali

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In the Balance of Power - Omar H. Ali

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of black abolitionists who quickly allied themselves with the Liberty Party was Samuel Ringgold Ward. Born in Maryland, Ward escaped to New Jersey with his slave parents in 1820. In 1826, they moved to New York, where the young Ward was educated by Quakers. He would complete his education and go on to teach in local black schools. He became an agent for the American Anti-Slavery Society in 1839 while serving as a Congregationalist minister.21 According to Douglass’s later account, Ward had no peer when it came to “depth of thought, fluency in speech, readiness of wit, logical exactness, and general intelligence.” In his Autobiography of a Fugitive Negro, published in 1855, Ward recounts how in 1840 he “became for the first time a member of [the Liberty] party.” He goes on to say that “with it I cast my first vote; to it I devoted my political activity.”22

      Like Douglass and Ward, Henry Highland Garnet (whose grandfather was said to have been an African military leader who was captured and sold into slavery) was a fugitive from Maryland. As a child, he escaped to Pennsylvania with his family, and they moved to New York City in the mid-1820s. Garnet studied at the Oneida Theological Institute in upstate New York and joined the American Anti-Slavery Society after graduating. He participated in abolitionist meetings and began to develop a reputation as a fiery speaker. Upon the formation of the Liberty Party, he proudly declared himself “a Liberty Party man.”23 He was not alone in his support for the third party: New York’s leading black newspaper would throw its support behind the Liberty Party as well. In 1840, the Colored American asked, “For whom shall we vote … is the question?” And then urged “the Liberty Ticket, with James G. Birney at the head.”24

      The Liberty Party challenged the proslavery Democratic and Whig parties in the national election of 1840. President Martin Van Buren, the Democratic nominee from New York, was seeking reelection. In the 1820s, he was responsible for helping to make the Democratic Party the first national modern party organization, featuring nationally delegated conventions to nominate candidates and a patronage system that enabled elected officials to appoint their supporters to administrative offices. In the run-up to the presidential election, Van Buren was heavily blamed for the nation’s economic depression (beginning with the Panic of 1837) by the Whig’s nominee William Henry Harrison, a former U.S. senator from Ohio. Harrison would go on to win the election with 52.9 percent of the total vote, 6.1 percent more than Van Buren received, and 234 of 294 electoral college votes. The Liberty Party’s Birney received 7,069 votes nationally (0.3 percent of the vote and no electoral college votes).25 At least 2,798 of these votes came from New York State, where 50,031 African Americans lived, or 2.1 percent of the population of the state. In New York City, where 16,358 African Americans lived, or 5.2 percent of the population of the city, black voters in the Fifth and Eighth wards supported the third party against Tammany Hall.26 While less than a single percent of the total national vote was cast for the Liberty Party’s presidential and vice-presidential candidates, it was enough to begin building an electoral base from which further campaigns could be launched.27 Within six months, the party’s central nominating committee, which included black leaders Theodore S. Wright, who led the First Presbyterian Church in New York City, and Charles B. Ray, editor of the Colored American, met in New York, looking toward the next election.28

      Following the 1840 election, black abolitionists who had not supported the Liberty Party began to move toward it. Salmon P. Chase, esteemed in the black community for his defense of fugitive slaves, joined the party in 1841 and soon assumed a leading role.29 Between 1840 and 1843, a number of statewide black conventions would meet at which candidates were individually endorsed to run on the Liberty ticket. Economic arguments were added to the moral and political arguments against slavery: Chase developed the concept of the “Slave Power,” the idea that slave owners were conspiring to seize control of the federal government and stop the progress of liberty. Meanwhile, fellow white abolitionist Joshua Leavitt, who had helped found the New York City Anti-Slavery Society, argued in a speech, “The Political Power of Slavery and the financial Power of Slavery,” that Northern commercial interests would perish if slaveholding interests were left unchecked. Leavitt’s address was carried in all the major black and white abolitionist newspapers of the day and widely distributed at state and national conventions, including at the 1841 national Liberty Party convention. Delegates at the convention backed Leavitt’s economic arguments and passed resolutions to abolish slavery in the District of Columbia and any new territories, as well as to oppose the federal fugitive slave law and the “three-fifths” clause in the Constitution. The resolutions were supplemented by calls for the extension of black voting rights and greater African American participation in the electoral process. Black support for the third party grew decisively. The next year, delegates of the Colored State Convention met in Rochester, New York, where they passed their own resolution to support the Liberty Party; and in Massachusetts, Garnet delivered one of the major addresses at the Liberty Party’s statewide meeting. According to Benjamin Quarles, Garnet’s speech was enthusiastically received at Faneuil Hall in Boston, where the “mixed” audience, it was reported, “constantly interrupted him with laughter, applause, and encouraging cries of ‘hear, hear.’”30

      African Americans would begin actively campaigning for the third party in the fall of 1843.31 From August 15 to 19, the National Convention of Colored Citizens met in Buffalo, New York, where Garnet rallied support for the Liberty Party.32 Rev. Amos G. Beman served as president; Frederick Douglass, A. M. Summer, James Sharp, F. Pierce, and W. W. Mathews served as vice presidents; and Charles B. Ray, James Duffin, and A. Francis served as secretaries.33 Garnet, along with Charles B. Ray, William C. Munroe, and Theodore S. Wright, led the debate against the moral suasionists. While Douglass and Massachusetts delegate Charles Lenox Remond opposed any alliance between the convention and the Liberty Party, they were outvoted by nearly fifty others who supported formal endorsement. The political abolitionists carried the convention. There were only seven dissenting votes against endorsing the Liberty Party, which was holding its national convention at the end of the month.34

      Black leaders had generated grassroots support among African Americans by the time delegates met for the Liberty Party’s national nominating convention in Buffalo on August 30, 1843. In addition to the national black convention held in New York City two weeks earlier, the Liberator reported that black New Yorkers met in Rochester, where they also passed a resolution in support of the Liberty Party.35 Black and white delegates arrived from all of the free states, except New Hampshire, to attend the Liberty Party convention. Wesley describes the national meeting as “the most significant convention in the history of the Negro’s political life in the United States prior to the Civil War … the first time in American history that Negro citizens were actively in the leadership of a political convention.”36

      The national Liberty Party’s black delegates were led by Garnet, Ray, and Ward, who were either appointed to various party committees or given prominent roles in the convention. Garnet was appointed to the committee that would nominate officers and delivered the news of the national black convention’s support for the Liberty Party; Ray, who served as one of the convention’s secretaries, was appointed to the committee to make a roll of the convention; while Ward had opened up the convention with a prayer, which he followed with a formal address to the body.37 Birney was again nominated as the party’s standard bearer, but this time Thomas Morris received the vice-presidential nod. Morris had built his credentials as an abolitionist sympathizer while serving as a Democrat in Ohio in both the House and the U.S. Senate from the 1810s through the mid-1830s. In addition to the nominations of Birney and Morris, two key resolutions—the 35th and the 36th—were passed at the convention. Designed to reach out to black voters, resolution 35 demanded an end to any form of discrimination based on race, that is, “to remove all … remnants and effects of the slave system.” Meanwhile, resolution 36 welcomed “colored fellow citizens” into the party in order to “secure the rights of mankind.”38 Rev. Jermain Wesley Loguen, a black abolitionist from Syracuse, began stumping for the Liberty Party following its national convention. In time, he was joined by other black leaders.39

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