Prints & Photographs Department, MSRC |
Image courtesy of J.D. Thomas of Accessible Archives |
Image courtesy of J.D. Thomas of Accessible Archives |
Prejudice existed and the Batavia published a small note about the Fisk Jubilee Singers in the early 1880s:
We can also witness the discrimination and difficulties faced by the singers in their travels:
Collection: African American Newspapers
Publication: THE CHRISTIAN RECORDER
Date: March 2, 1882Publication: THE CHRISTIAN RECORDER
Title: Certain hotels in Washington, D.C., refused last week to ac
Location: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Certain hotels in Washington, D.C., refused last week to accommodate the Fisk Jubilee Singers.
Some no doubt, truthfully basing their refusal on lack of room, and
others squarely on the ground of color. It should not be understood,
however, that the best hotels in Washington refuse to accommodate people
on account of their color. It is not a fact, and such an impression
would do harm. –
Indianapolis Leader
.
Collection: African American Newspapers
Publication: THE CHRISTIAN RECORDER
Date: January 6, 1881Publication: THE CHRISTIAN RECORDER
Title: ----- JUBILEE SINGERS' CIVIL RIGHTS CASE. -----
Location: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
-----
JUBILEE SINGERS' CIVIL RIGHTS CASE.
-----
MR. EDITOR.- As is perhaps
wellknown to most of your readers, the national conference of colored
man, held in the city of Nashville, Tenn., May 6th, 1879, resolved to
prosecute the conductor of one of the Tennessee railways, for roughly
seizing by the arm one of the lady members of the Jubilee Singers,
and thrusting her from the platform of the ladies' coach to the smoking
car. For the conducting of the case, the conference appointed a
prosecuting committee consisting of J.H. Burrus, Rev. G.H. Shaffer, and
W.H. Yardly, Esq., the first two of Nashville, and the last of
Knoxville, Tenn. Even Canada was not immune to showing discrimination
Collection: African American Newspapers
Publication: THE CHRISTIAN RECORDER
Date: November 10, 1881
Title: REFERRING TO THE recent insult offered the Jubilee Singers
Location: Philadelphia, PA
REFERRING TO THE recent insult offered the Jubilee Singers by the Toronto hotel-keepers, The Citizen of that city, for a copy of which we are indebted to F.J. Louden, says:
“Their recent visit to Canada has been most successful. The action of certain Toronto hotel-keepers in refusing them admission on account of their color, has caused a reaction in their favor, and the citizens, from the Mayor and ex-Vice Chancellor Blake down to the humblest of them, have vied with each other to do them honor. The Press, too, was aroused by the cowardly distinction. Globe, Mail, Telegram, World and News all championed the cause of the signers, and Canada's Cartoonist, Mr. Grip, employed his powerful pencil to the discomfiture of the hotel-keepers and the honor of the singers.”
Publication: THE CHRISTIAN RECORDER
Date: November 10, 1881
Title: REFERRING TO THE recent insult offered the Jubilee Singers
Location: Philadelphia, PA
REFERRING TO THE recent insult offered the Jubilee Singers by the Toronto hotel-keepers, The Citizen of that city, for a copy of which we are indebted to F.J. Louden, says:
“Their recent visit to Canada has been most successful. The action of certain Toronto hotel-keepers in refusing them admission on account of their color, has caused a reaction in their favor, and the citizens, from the Mayor and ex-Vice Chancellor Blake down to the humblest of them, have vied with each other to do them honor. The Press, too, was aroused by the cowardly distinction. Globe, Mail, Telegram, World and News all championed the cause of the signers, and Canada's Cartoonist, Mr. Grip, employed his powerful pencil to the discomfiture of the hotel-keepers and the honor of the singers.”
In the next few weeks during Black History Month I will be publishing biographies based on research I've done on a few of the Fisk Jubilee Singers. They deserve to be remembered.
Image: The Fisk Jubilee Singers in 1882. They are, from left to right, Patti Malone, George E. Barrett, Mattie L. Lawrence, C.W. Payne, Ella Shepard (seated), F.J. Loudin, Maggie L. Porter (seated), B.W. Thomas, and Mabel R. Lewis (seated).
Source for all newspaper accounts from The Christian Recorder from Accessible Archives
The first group photo is not of the Fisk Jubilee Singers, though several of the original troupe are pictured. It is instead the Loudin Jubilee Singers, an offshoot established by Frederick Loudin (with beard) who took his chorus all over the world: it was established after the original music director, George Leonard White, resigned and the troupe was disbanded.
ReplyDeleteI was mistaken. The first group shown is not Loudin's troupe but the independent company that was organized by George L. White after the original group disbanded. I know this because of the absence of many of the original troupe and the presence of Ella Sheppard, who loyally assisted White until he was forced to disband his troupe after a suffering bad fall in Chautaqua. Sheppard never was a member of Loudin's troupe.
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