A Year of Hope for Joplin and Johnson
In 1910, the boxer Jack Johnson and the musician Scott Joplin embodied a new sense of possibility for African-Americans
- By Michael Walsh
- Smithsonian magazine, June 2010, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 6)
Although Joplin did not invent ragtime—his friend Tom Turpin, a saloonkeeper in St. Louis’ Chestnut Valley sporting district in the late 19th century, was one of a few forerunners—he raised what had been a brothel entertainment into the realm of high art, taking the four-square beat of the traditional march, adding a touch of African syncopation and throwing in the lyricism of bel canto operas and Chopin nocturnes. Joplin, however, wanted more than fame as the “King of Ragtime.”
Joplin adhered to the philosophy of Booker T. Washington, who traced his rise out of bondage in the celebrated autobiography Up from Slavery and founded the Tuskegee Institute in Alabama. Where Du Bois, the scion of a family of New England landholders, aimed his message at what he called the “Talented Tenth” of the African-American population, Booker Taliaferro Washington advocated a by-the-bootstraps approach for the masses, one that accepted segregation as a necessary, temporary evil while African-Americans overcame the baleful legacy of slavery. Born in 1856, the son of a white man and a slave woman in Virginia, he preached that training and education were the keys to racial advancement. The Negro, he maintained, had to demonstrate equality with the European by exhibiting the virtues of patience, industry, thrift and usefulness. “In all things that are purely social we can be as separate as the fingers,” he said in his famous Atlanta Compromise speech of 1895, “yet one as the hand in all things essential to mutual progress.”
Washington’s message was reflected in Joplin’s opera: set in the aftermath of the Civil War in Arkansas, Treemonisha told the tale of a wondrous infant girl found under a tree by a newly freed, childless couple named Ned and Monisha. Educated by a white woman, the girl, Treemonisha, rises to lead her people, defeating evil conjurers who would keep them enslaved by superstition, advocating education and bringing her followers triumphantly into the light of Reason to the strains of one of Joplin’s greatest numbers, “A Real Slow Drag.”
Joplin had long dreamed of a grand synthesis of Western and African musical traditions, a work that would announce to white America that black music had come of age. With Treemonisha, he felt that goal was in his grasp.
The first decade of the 20th century followed a period of disillusion and disenfranchisement for African-Americans. Starting in 1877 with the end of Reconstruction—when Republican President Rutherford B. Hayes withdrew federal troops from former Confederate states under an agreement that had secured him the disputed presidential election of the preceding year—the promises of emancipation proved hollow as newly elected Southern Democrats passed Jim Crow laws that codified segregation. In the 1890s alone, 1,111 African-Americans were lynched nationwide.
When President Theodore Roosevelt received Booker T. Washington for dinner at the White House in 1901, black America was electrified; Joplin memorialized the event in his first opera, A Guest of Honor, now lost, and he based his rag “The Strenuous Life” on TR’s landmark 1899 speech extolling the “life of toil and effort, of labor and strife.” But the White House visit was ridiculed across the South. (Back in Sedalia, the Sentinel published a derisive poem titled “N-----s in the White House” on its front page.)
In his 1954 study The Negro in American Life and Thought, Rayford Logan characterized the decades before the turn of the century as “the nadir” for African-Americans. The historian David Levering Lewis agrees. “It was a time of especially brutal relations between the races,” says the winner of two Pulitzer Prizes for his two-volume biography of Du Bois. “By 1905, segregation has been poured in concrete, as it were. Blacks can’t ride buses, go to vaudeville shows or the cinema unless they sat in the crow’s nest. [Blacks and whites] begin to live parallel lives, although not on an even plane.”
By the end of the decade, black Americans had begun the Great Migration northward, leaving the old Confederacy for the industrial cities of the North. Between 1910 and 1940, an estimated 1.75 million black Southerners would uproot themselves and settle not only in New York, Philadelphia and Chicago, but also in such smaller cities as Dayton, Toledo and Newark. “A new type of Negro is evolving—a city Negro,” the sociologist Charles S. Johnson would write in 1925. “In ten years, Negroes have been actually transplanted from one culture to another.” That same year, the intellectual Alain Locke said the “New Negro” had “renewed self-respect and self-dependence” and was slipping “from under the tyranny of social intimidation and...shaking off the psychology of imitation and implied inferiority.”
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Comments (7)
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Posted by Missouri car dealership on November 18,2012 | 01:47 AM
The Article mentions a unnamed Black Constable killed in Mounds Illinois July 1910. A lawman was killed in this place at that time. Here are the facts:
His name was Wesley Davis
He was a deputy Sherriff
A contemporary article mentions the incident in which he was killed-but does not give his skin color. http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GSln=Davis&GSfn=W&GSbyrel=in&GSdy=1910&GSdyrel=in&GSob=n&GRid=44041425&
Posted by T.Fazzini on July 7,2010 | 10:46 AM
jack johnson's fight was in Reno, checkout the brilliant Ken Burns documentary Unforgiveable Blackness for the life story of Jack Johnson
Posted by john radford on June 15,2010 | 03:51 PM
The video of this fight is available on YouTube- just search for Johnson vs Jeffries fight.
Posted by Heather on June 9,2010 | 04:32 PM
Ms. de Dufour,
The fight between Jack Johnson and Jim Jeffries most definitely took place in Reno, Nevada. Perhaps you were thinking of the 1897 exhibition fights between Jeffries and Jim Corbett that were held in Carson City, Nevada.
Posted by Lyn Garrity, Associate Editor on June 2,2010 | 01:47 PM
A remarkable article - brought home the realities of racism and how deeply embedded they are. I was surprised to read of Jack London's view of things - I would have expected something different, given his commitments to the underdog. Thanks for making this available.
Posted by Tom on May 26,2010 | 09:23 AM
The Johnson-Jeffries fight occurred in Carson City, NV NOT Reno, NV. Please check your facts.
Posted by Karyn de Dufour on May 25,2010 | 11:57 AM