Chapter 57
[605] Works of Hamilton, vol. vii. p. 191.
[606] Sparks's Was.h.i.+ngton, vol. viii. pp. 431,432.
[607] Sparks's Was.h.i.+ngton, vol. viii, Appendix, p. 544.
[608] U.S. Statutes at large, vol. viii, pp. 54, 57.
[609] Ibid., pp. 80, 83.
[610] U.S. Statutes at large, vol. viii. p. 218.
CHAPTER XXIX.
THE NEGRO INTELLECT.--BANNEKER THE ASTRONOMER.[611].--FULLER THE MATHEMATICIAN.--DERHAM THE PHYSICIAN.
STATUTORY PROHIBITION AGAINST THE EDUCATION OF NEGROES.--BENJAMIN BANNEKER, THE NEGRO ASTRONOMER AND PHILOSOPHER.--HIS ANTECEDENTS.--YOUNG BANNEKER AS A FARMER AND INVENTOR.--THE MILLS OF ELLICOTT & Co.--BANNEKER CULTIVATES HIS MECHANICAL GENIUS AND MATHEMATICAL TASTES.--BANNEKER'S FIRST CALCULATION OF AN ECLIPSE SUBMITTED FOR INSPECTION IN 1789.--HIS LETTER TO MR.
ELLICOTT.--THE TESTIMONY OF A PERSONAL ACQUAINTANCE OF BANNEKER AS TO HIS UPRIGHT CHARACTER.--HIS HOME BECOMES A PLACE OF INTEREST TO VISITORS.--RECORD OF HIS BUSINESS TRANSACTIONS.--MRS MASON'S VISIT TO HIM.--SHE ADDRESSES HIM IN VERSE.--BANNEKER REPLIES BY LETTER TO HER.--PREPARES HIS FIRST ALMANAC FOR PUBLICATION IN 1792.--t.i.tLE OF HIS ALMANAC.--BANNEKER'S LETTER TO THOMAS JEFFERSON.--THOMAS JEFFERSON'S REPLY.--BANNEKER INVITED TO ACCOMPANY THE COMMISSIONERS TO RUN THE LINES OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA.--BANNEKER'S HABITS OF STUDYING THE HEAVENLY BODIES.--MINUTE DESCRIPTION GIVEN TO HIS SISTERS IN REFERENCE TO THE DISPOSITION OF HIS PERSONAL PROPERTY AFTER DEATH..--HIS DEATH..--REGARDED AS THE MOST DISTINGUISHED NEGRO OF HIS TIME.--FULLER THE MATHEMATICIAN, OR "THE VIRGINIA CALCULATOR".--FULLER OF AFRICAN BIRTH, BUT STOLEN AND SOLD AS A SLAVE INTO VIRGINIA.--VISITED BY MEN OF LEARNING.--HE WAS p.r.o.nOUNCED TO BE A PRODIGY IN THE MANIPULATION OF FIGURES.--HIS DEATH.--DERHAM THE PHYSICIAN.--SCIENCE OF MEDICINE REGARDED AS THE MOST INTRICATE PURSUIT OF MAN.--DAILY LIFE OF JAMES DERHAM.--HIS KNOWLEDGE OF MEDICINES, HOW ACQUIRED.--HE BECOMES A PROMINENT PHYSICIAN IN NEW ORLEANS.--DR. RUSH GIVES AN ACCOUNT OF AN INTERVIEW WITH HIM.--WHAT THE NEGRO RACE PRODUCED BY THEIR GENIUS IN AMERICA.
From the moment slavery gained a foothold in North America until the direful hour that witnessed its dissolution amid the shock of embattled arms, learning was the forbidden fruit that no Negro dared taste. Positive and explicit statutes everywhere, as fiery swords, drove him away hungry from the tree of intellectual life; and all persons were forbidden to pluck the fruit for him, upon pain of severe penalties. Every yearning for intellectual food was answered by whips and thumb-screws.
But, notwithstanding the state of almost instinctive ignorance in which slavery held the Negro, there were those who occasionally astounded the world with the brightness of their intellectual genius.
There were some Negroes whose minds ran the gauntlet of public proscription on one side and repressive laws on the other, and safely gained eminence in _astronomy, mathematics_, and _medicine_.
BANNEKER THE ASTRONOMER.
BENJAMIN BANNEKER, the Negro _astronomer_ and _philosopher_, was born in Maryland, on the 9th of November, 1731. His maternal grandmother was a white woman, a native of England, named _Molly Welsh_. She came to Maryland in a s.h.i.+pload of white emigrants, who, according to the custom of those days, were sold to pay their pa.s.sage. She served her master faithfully for seven years, when, being free, she purchased a small farm, at a nominal price. Soon after she bought two Negro slaves from a s.h.i.+p that had come into the Chesapeake Bay, and began life anew. Both of these Negroes proved to be men of more than ordinary fidelity, industry, and intelligence. One of them, it was said, was the son of an African king. She gave him his freedom, and then married him. His name was Banneker.[612] Four children were the fruit of this union; but the chief interest centres in only one,--a girl, named Mary. Following the example of her mother, she also married a native of Africa: but both tradition and history preserve an unbroken silence respecting his life, with the single exception that, embracing the Christian religion, he was baptized "Robert Banneker;" and the record of his death is thus preserved, in the family Bible: "_Robert Banneker departed this life, July 'ye_ 10th 1759." Thus it is evident that he took his wife's surname. Benjamin Banneker was the only child of Robert and Mary Banneker.
Young Benjamin was a great favorite with his grandmother, who taught him to read. She had a sincere love of the Sacred Scriptures, which she did not neglect to inculcate into the youthful heart of her grandson. In the neighborhood,--at that time an almost desolate spot,--a school was conducted where the master admitted several Colored children, with the whites, to the benefits of his instructions. It was a "pay school," and thither young Banneker was sent at a very tender age. His application to his studies was equalled by none. When the other pupils were playing, he found great pleasure in his books. How long he remained in school, is not known.
His father purchased a farm of one Richard Gist, and here he spent the remnant of his days.
When young Banneker had obtained his majority, he gave attention to the various interests of farm-life. He was industrious, intelligent in his labors, scrupulously neat in the management of his grounds, cultivated a valuable garden, was gentle in his treatment of stock,--horses, cows, etc.,--and was indeed comfortably situated.
During those seasons of leisure which come to agriculturists, he stored his mind with useful knowledge. Starting with the Bible, he read history, biography, travels, romance, and such works on general literature as he was able to borrow. His mind seemed to turn with especial satisfaction to mathematics, and he acquainted himself with the most difficult problems.
He had a taste also for mechanics. He conceived the idea of making a timepiece, a clock, and about the year 1770 constructed one. With his imperfect tools, and with no other model than a borrowed watch, it had cost him long and patient labor to perfect it, to make the variation necessary to cause it to strike the hours, and produce a concert of correct action between the hour, the minute, and the second machinery.
He confessed that its regularity in pointing out the progress of time had amply rewarded all his pains in its construction.[613]
In 1773 Ellicott & Co. built flour-mills in a valley near the banks of the Patapsco River. Banneker watched the mills go up; and, when the machinery was set in motion, looked
After a short time the Ellicotts erected a store, where, a little later, a post-office, was opened. To this point the farmers and gentlemen, for miles around, used to congregate. Banneker often called at the post-office, where, after overcoming his natural modesty and diffidence, he was frequently called out in conversations covering a variety of topics. His conversational powers, his inexhaustible fund of information, and his broad learning (for those times and considering his circ.u.mstances), made him the connoisseur of that section. At times he related, in modest terms, the difficulties he was constrained to encounter in order to acquire the knowledge of books he had, and the unsatisfied longings he still had for further knowledge.
His fame as a mathematician was already established, and with the increasing facilities of communication his accomplishments and achievements were occupying the thought of many intelligent people.
"By this time he had become very expert in the solution of difficult mathematical problems, which were then, more than in this century, the amus.e.m.e.nt of persons of leisure, and they were frequently sent to him from scholars residing in different parts of our country who wished to test his capacity. He is reported to have been successful in every case, and, sometimes, he returned with his answers, questions of his own composition conveyed in rhyme."
The following question was propounded to Mr. George Ellicott, and was solved by Benjamin Hallowell of Alexandria.
"A Cooper and Vintner sat down for a talk, Both being so groggy, that neither could walk, Says Cooper to Vintner, 'I'm the first of my trade, There's no kind of vessel, but what I have made, And of any shape, Sir,--just what you will,-- And of any size, Sir,--from a ton to a gill!'
'Then,' says the Vintner, 'you're the man for me,-- Make me a vessel, if we can agree.
The top and the bottom diameter define, To bear that proportion as fifteen to nine; Thirty-five inches are just what I crave, No more and no less, in the depth, will I have; Just thirty-nine gallons this vessel must hold,-- Then I will reward you with silver or gold,-- Give me your promise, my honest old friend?'
'I'll make it to-morrow, that you may depend!'
So the next day the Cooper his work to discharge, Soon made the new vessel, but made it too large:-- He took out some staves, which made it too small, And then cursed the vessel, the Vintner and all.
He beat on his breast, 'By the Powers!'--he swore, He never would work at his trade any more!
Now my worthy friend, find out, if you can, The vessel's dimensions and comfort the man!
"BENJAMIN BANNEKER."
The greater diameter of Banneker's tub must be 24.746 inches; the less diameter, 14.8476 inches.
He was described by a gentleman who had often met him at Ellicott's Mills as "of black complexion, medium stature, of uncommonly soft and gentlemanly manners and of pleasing colloquial powers."
Fortunately Mr. George Ellicott was a gentleman of exquisite literary taste and critical judgment. He discovered in Banneker the elements of a cultivated gentleman and profound scholar. He threw open his library to this remarkable Negro, loaded him with books and astronomical instruments, and gave him the emphatic a.s.surance of sympathy and encouragement. He occasionally made Banneker a visit, when he would urge upon him the importance of making astronomical calculations for almanacs. Finally, in the spring of 1789, Banneker submitted to Mr.
Ellicott his first projection of an eclipse. It was found to contain a slight error; and, having kindly pointed it out, Mr. Ellicott received the following reply from Banneker:--
LETTER OF BENJAMIN BANNEKER TO GEORGE ELLICOTT.
"Sir,--I received your letter at the hand of Bell but found nothing strange to me In the Letter Concerning the number of Eclipses, the according to authors the Edge of the penumber only touches the Suns Limb in that Eclips, that I left out of the Number--which happens April 14th day, at 37 minutes past 7 o'clock in the morning, and is the first we shall have; but since you wrote to me, I drew in the Equations of the Node which will cause a small Solar Defet, but as I did not intend to publish, I was not so very peticular as I should have been, but was more intent upon the true method of projecting; a Solar Eclips--It is an easy matter for us when a Diagram is laid down before us, to draw one in resemblance of it, but it is a hard matter for young Tyroes in Astronomy, when only the Elements for the projection is laid down before him to draw his diagram with any degree of Certainty.
"Says the Learned LEADBETTER, the projection, I shall here describe, is that mentioned by Mr. Flamsted. When the sun is in Cancer, Leo, Virgo, Libra, Scorpio or, Sagitary, the Axes of the Globe must lie to the right hand of the Axes of the Ecliptic, but when the sun is in Capricorn, Aquarius, Pisces, Aries, Taurus, or Gemini, then to the left.
"Says the wise author FERGUSON, when the sun is in Capercorn, Aquarius, Pisces, Aries, Taurus, and Gemeni, the Northern half of the Earths Axes lies to the right hand of the Axes of the Ecliptic and to the left hand, whilst the Sun is on the other six signs.
"Now Mr. Ellicott, two such learned gentlemen as the above mentioned, one in direct opposition to the other, stagnates young beginners, but I hope the stagnation will not be of long duration, for this I observe that Leadbetter counts the time on the path of Vertex 1, 2, 3 &c. from the right to the left hand or from the consequent to the antecedent,--But Ferguson on the path of Vertex counts the time 1, 2, 3 &c.
from the left to the right hand, according to the order of numbers, so that that is regular, shall compensate for irregularity. Now sir if I can overcome this difficulty I doubt not being able to calculate a Common Almanac--Sir no more
"But remain your faithful friend, "B. BANNEKER.
"Mr. GEORGE ELLICOTT, _Oct. 13th, 1789._"
His mother, an active, intelligent, slight-built Mulatto, with long black hair, had exercised a tender but positive influence over him.
His character, so far as is known, was without blemish, with the single exception of an occasional use of ardent spirits. He found himself conforming too frequently to the universal habit of the times, social drinking. Liquors and wines were upon the tables and sideboards of the best families, and wherever Banneker went it confronted him. He felt his weakness in this regard, and resolved to abstain from the use of strong drink. Some time after returning from a visit to Was.h.i.+ngton, in company with the commissioners who laid out the District of Columbia, he related to his friends that during the entire absence from home he had abstained from the use of liquors; adding, "I feared to trust myself even with wine, lest it should steal away the little sense I have." On a leaf of one of his almanacs, appears the following in his own handwriting:--
"Evil communications corrupt good manners, I hope to live to hear, that good communication corrects 'bad manners.'"
He had a just appreciation of his own strength. He hated vice of every kind; and, while he did not connect himself to any church, he was deeply attached to the _Society of Friends._ He was frequently seen in their meeting-house. He usually occupied the rear bench, where he would sit with uncovered head, leaning upon his staff, wrapt in profound meditation. The following letter addressed to Mr. J. Saurin Norris shows that his character was upright:--
"In the year 1800, I commenced my engagements in the store of Ellicott's Mills, where my first acquaintance with Benjamin Banneker began. He often came to the store to purchase articles for his own use; and, after hearing him converse, I was always anxious to wait upon him. After making his purchases, he usually went to the part of the store where George Ellicott was in the habit of sitting to converse with him about the affairs of our Government and other matters. He was very precise in conversation and exhibited deep reflection. His deportment whenever I saw him, appeared to be perfectly upright and correct, and he seemed to be acquainted with every thing of importance that was pa.s.sing in the country.
"I recollect to have seen his Almanacs in my father's house, and believe they were the only ones used in the neighborhood at the time. He was a large man inclined to be fleshy, and was far advanced in years, when I first saw him, I remember being once at his house, but do not recollect any thing about the comforts of his establishment, nor of the old clock, about which you enquired. He was fond of, and well qualified, to work out abstruse questions in arithmetic. I remember, he brought to the store, one which he had composed himself, and presented to George Ellicott for solution. I had a copy which I have since lost; but the character and deportment of the man being so wholly different from any thing I had ever seen from one of his color, his question made so deep an impression on my mind I have ever since retained a perfect recollection of it, except two lines, which do not alter the sense. I remember that George Ellicott, was engaged in making out the answer, and cannot now say that he succeeded, but have no doubt he did. I have thus, briefly given you my recollections of Benjamin Banneker. I was young when he died, and doubtless many incidents respecting him, have, from the time which has since elapsed, pa.s.sed from my recollection:
"CHARLES W. DORSEY, _of Elkridge_."
After the death of his mother, Banneker dwelt alone until the day of his death, having never married, his manners were gentle and engaging, his benevolence proverbial. His home became a place of great interest to visitors, whom he always received cordially, and treated hospitably all who called.
"We found the venerable star-gazer," says the author of the Memoir of Susanna Mason, "under a wide spreading pear tree, leaden with delicious fruit; he came forward to meet us, and bade us welcome to his lowly dwelling. It was built of logs, one story in height, and was surrounded by an orchard. In one corner of the room, was suspended a clock of his own construction, _which_ was a true hearald of departing hours.