One of the most "dangerous" men in American history - Keenan Norris

247,986 views ・ 2023-02-07

TED-Ed


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In 1830 at a clothing store near the Boston Harbor,
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David Walker carefully stitched a pamphlet
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into the lining of a sailor’s coat.
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The volume was thin enough to be completely hidden,
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but its content was far from insubstantial.
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In fact, at the time, many members of the US government
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considered this pamphlet to be one of the most dangerous documents
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in American history.
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So to ensure this volume reached his audience,
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Walker had to hide his work in the clothing
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of both willing co-conspirators and unknowing sailors;
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smuggling the pamphlet throughout the country.
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But what was this incendiary document? And who exactly was the man who wrote it?
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Son of an enslaved father and a freedwoman,
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David Walker was born free in the late 18th century
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in Wilmington, North Carolina.
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From a young age, he sought to extend his freedom to all Black Americans,
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and after moving to Charleston as a young man,
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he became closely involved with the African Methodist Episcopal Church.
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At that time, the mainstream movement to end slavery was comprised of societies
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led by wealthy white men who favored gradual change
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and avoided confrontation with slaveholders.
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But the AME Church practiced a more radical brand of abolition.
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In 1822, AME leader Denmark Vesey planned a major insurrection
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intended to violently liberate Charleston’s enslaved community
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and set the city ablaze.
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It’s unclear if Walker contributed to Vesey’s plan,
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but he wasn’t among the many AME members who were arrested and executed
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for this attempted rebellion.
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In 1825, Walker surfaced in Boston, where he rejoined the fight against slavery.
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In addition to marrying fellow activist Eliza Butler
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and opening his clothing store,
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Walker helped fund America’s first Black-owned newspaper.
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Is passionate articles and public speeches sought to instill pride and camaraderie
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into those fighting for Black liberation.
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But to truly unite free and enslaved Black Americans,
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Walker would have to go beyond Boston.
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In 1829, he poured his ideas
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into the “Appeal to the Colored Citizens of the World.”
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This treatise was punctuated with furious exclamation marks
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and emphasized the spiritual righteousness of resistance.
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He described the suffering of enslaved people in graphic detail to prove
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that the reality for Black Americans was often “kill or be killed.”
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And given these circumstances,
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Walker staunchly defended the right to militant action.
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This wasn’t his only departure from moderate mainstream abolitionists.
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To stress the importance of Black solidarity,
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Walker connected American abolitionism
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with global movements for Black liberation.
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He called for an international Black freedom struggle
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in an early display of what would come to be called Pan-Africanism.
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But at the same time, he opposed the popular movement
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for Black Americans to emigrate to Africa.
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While the “Appeal” criticized the Founding Fathers for their hypocrisy,
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Walker insisted that Black people were essential to the country’s creation,
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and had an undeniable right to American citizenship.
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Walker suspected these incendiary arguments
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would make him a target for violence.
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But in spite of the danger, he continued using sailors to smuggle his work.
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The “Appeal” traveled down the coast into the hands of shopkeepers,
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church leaders, political organizers, and underground abolitionist networks.
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For these readers, Walker’s words galvanized militant efforts
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to overthrow slave owners
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and its call to arms struck fear into white officials.
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Police intercepted its delivery,
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and quarantined Black sailors at Southern ports.
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The pamphlet inspired Louisiana to ban anti-slavery literature,
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and both North and South Carolina cracked down on Black education
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to prevent literacy among enslaved peoples.
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Southern officials even placed a bounty on Walker’s head
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worth the modern equivalent of $322,000.
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But while friends urged him to flee, Walker refused to abandon his cause.
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Tragically, his bravery couldn’t protect him
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from the deadliest disease of his time.
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In August 1830, Walker was found dead.
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And while his associates declared him the victim of assassination,
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it’s now widely believed that he died from tuberculosis.
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Following his death, Walker's message continued to resound.
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Frederick Douglass credited him as the originator of radical abolitionism,
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and his “Appeal” inspired some of the most influential members
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of the 20th century liberation movement.
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From Malcolm X’s militant approach to Black resistance,
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to James Cone’s writing on Black spirituality,
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Walker’s legacy remains crucially important to the history
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of Black resistance movements—
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and their visions for the future.
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