The Shocking Savagery of America’s Early History
Bernard Bailyn, one of our greatest historians, shines his light on the nation’s Dark Ages
- By Ron Rosenbaum
- Smithsonian magazine, March 2013, Subscribe
It’s all a bit of a blur, isn’t it? That little-remembered century—1600 to 1700—that began with the founding (and foundering) of the first permanent English settlement in America, the one called Jamestown, whose endemic perils portended failure for the dream of a New World. The century that saw all the disease-ridden, barely civilized successors to Jamestown slaughtering and getting slaughtered by the Original Inhabitants, hanging on by their fingernails to some fetid coastal swampland until Pocahontas saved Thanksgiving. No, that’s not right, is it? I said it was a blur.
Enter Bernard Bailyn, the greatest historian of early America alive today. Now over 90 and ensconced at Harvard for more than six decades, Bailyn has recently published another one of his epoch-making grand narrative syntheses, The Barbarous Years, casting a light on the darkness, filling in the blank canvas with what he’s gleaned from what seems like every last scrap of crumbling diary page, every surviving chattel slave receipt and ship’s passenger manifest of the living and dead, every fearful sermon about the Antichrist that survived in the blackened embers of the burned-out churches.
Bailyn has not painted a pretty picture. Little wonder he calls it The Barbarous Years and spares us no details of the terror, desperation, degradation and widespread torture—do you really know what being “flayed alive” means? (The skin is torn from the face and head and the prisoner is disemboweled while still alive.) And yet somehow amid the merciless massacres were elements that gave birth to the rudiments of civilization—or in Bailyn’s evocative phrase, the fragile “integument of civility”—that would evolve 100 years later into a virtual Renaissance culture, a bustling string of self-governing, self-sufficient, defiantly expansionist colonies alive with an increasingly sophisticated and literate political and intellectual culture that would coalesce into the rationale for the birth of American independence. All the while shaping, and sometimes misshaping, the American character. It’s a grand drama in which the glimmers of enlightenment barely survive the savagery, what Yeats called “the blood-dimmed tide,” the brutal establishment of slavery, the race wars with the original inhabitants that Bailyn is not afraid to call “genocidal,” the full, horrifying details of which have virtually been erased.
“In truth, I didn’t think anyone sat around erasing it,” Bailyn tells me when I visit him in his spacious, document-stuffed study in Harvard’s Widener Library. He’s a wiry, remarkably fit-looking fellow, energetically jumping out of his chair to open up a file drawer and show me copies of one of his most-prized documentary finds: the handwritten British government survey records of America-bound colonists made in the 1770s, which lists the name, origin, occupation and age of the departing, one of the few islands of hard data about who the early Americans were.
“Nobody sat around erasing this history,” he says in an even tone, “but it’s forgotten.”
“Conveniently?” I ask.
“Yes,” he agrees. “Look at the ‘peaceful’ Pilgrims. Our William Bradford. He goes to see the Pequot War battlefield and he is appalled. He said, ‘The stink’ [of heaps of dead bodies] was too much.”
Bailyn is speaking of one of the early and bloodiest encounters, between our peaceful pumpkin pie-eating Pilgrims and the original inhabitants of the land they wanted to seize, the Pequots. But for Bailyn, the mercenary motive is less salient than the theological.
“The ferocity of that little war is just unbelievable,” Bailyn says. “The butchering that went on cannot be explained by trying to get hold of a piece of land. They were really struggling with this central issue for them, of the advent of the Antichrist.”
Suddenly, I felt a chill from the wintry New England air outside enter into the warmth of his study.
The Antichrist. The haunting figure presaging the Apocalypse from the Book of Revelation plays an important part in Bailyn’s explanation of the European settlers’ descent into unrestrained savagery. The key passage on this question comes late in his new book when Bailyn makes explicit a connection I had not seen before: between the physical savagery the radical dissenting Protestant settlers of America wreaked on the original inhabitants, and the intellectual savagery of their polemical attacks on the church and state authorities they fled from in Europe—and the savagery of vicious insult and vile denunciation they wreaked upon each other as well.
“The savagery of the [theological] struggle, the bitterness of the main contenders and the deep stain it left on the region’s collective memory” were driven by “elemental fears peculiar to what was experienced as a barbarous environment—fears of what could happen to civilized people in an unimaginable wilderness...in which God’s children [as they thought of themselves] were fated to struggle with pitiless agents of Satan, pagan Antichrists swarming in the world around them. The two [kinds of struggle, physical and metaphysical] were one: threats from within [to the soul] merged with threats from without to form a heated atmosphere of apocalyptic danger.”
***
Bernard Bailyn made his reputation when he took upon himself the leviathan task off cataloging the store of pre-Revolutionary War-era pamphlets, the denunciations and speculations and accusations privately published by surprisingly literate gentlemen farmers, Greek- and Roman-quoting tradesmen—“the Ebenezers,” as I think of them—most of whose colorful and thoughtful works had not been read for two centuries. He drew on that knowledge base to write The Ideological Origins of the American Revolution, which won him the first of his two Pulitzers after it was published in 1967.
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Comments (41)
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Nice stinker of a last line, though it probably appeased some of the whiners throwing around "America hater." America was briefly liberal, but has fast fallen hard into the hands of the pathologically wealthy and fool-baiting demagogues, who are little better than the savages and hands-of-glawd pictured here.
Posted by Ed Head on April 3,2013 | 11:32 AM
In the Western Plains Indian culture, ingenious means of torture was a way of life. They practiced it on other tribes (with whom they warred continually) as well as the white settlers. With-in the tribes, women were literally slaves. The myth of "The Noble Savage" is just that; a myth.
Posted by Timothy Rea on March 19,2013 | 11:23 AM
As a direct descendent of the eastern tribes with an unpublished history of our family tree,I would have to agree with most facts Mr.Bailyn points out.On the other hand ivy league schools,(with the help of the Smithsonian especially},are well known by those who care about real history as the ones who destroy the evidence of N.A.'s past.I am an amateur archeologist with great disdain for the college educated,I admit.On one hand I want to thank him for his research, on the other I wonder why he would even regard the Smithsonian as someone to talk to as they have purposely destroyed every bit of evidence pertaining to the advanced state of natives on this continent before the advance of the white puppet savages.Here is a message to these evil people,"we are still alive, we still remember, and we have not converted!"This is a damage control article.
Posted by Julian Alien on March 13,2013 | 08:19 PM
I was the tribal archaeologist for the Catawba people who still own a relatively small reservation in South Carolina. I never really settled on what to call them. Some insisted on Native Americans, some, aboriginals etc.. Since I retired I have begun to call them the First Americans. Feels right, and is not confusing. I hope i t catches on.
Posted by Rita Kenion on March 13,2013 | 05:45 PM
Pretty humorous, all these comments from (supposedly ex-subscriber) folks who reject the study of history, in favor of ideology. Believe in your ideologies all you want, but they do not alter the facts of history. Which many of us happen to be interested in. Allan Bloom got 'The Closing of the American Mind' a bit muddled. It doesn't proceed from higher education nearly so much as it does from Christianity and today's GOP.
Posted by vebiltdervan on March 13,2013 | 02:06 PM
As Captain Renault would say, "I'm shcoked". To think it is revealing information that there was violence between invaders and defenders anywhere at any time in history is pretty naive. The violence that ensued was normal and typical within the context of when it occurred. This is one of the worst articles I have ever read in any publication. The mis-statements (for example, actual definition of free market:an economic system in which prices and wages are determined by unrestricted competition between businesses, without government regulation or fear of monopolies)are so glaring and so numerous. I would have to write a response as long as the article to cover them all If this is what Smithsonian intends to present in its magazine, I will cancel. I can get this drivel in our community newpaper
Posted by John Rockwell on March 12,2013 | 02:57 AM
It's interesting that initial reactions among historians is that this is not new and that aspects of his approach are dated. That doesn't make the book bad. Bailyn's writing is sufficiently clear that he can appeal to a more popular audience than most historians--who all too often write for other scholars. As for balance, that is just hard. Yes civilizations are built on blood, as one person said below, and the fact that we have, to some extent, gone beyond blood to something better is an accomplishment of the highest order. But part of that accomplishment represents the willingness of a minority of Americans at different points in time to say to the majority, "this is wrong." To say that slavery is bararic and not just "peculiar." To say that the conquest of Native Americans put the lie to the majority's claim to be peace loving; to say that barring someone from voting just because you don't like the way he looks or smells (or what gender the voter may be) puts a lie to our claims of democracy. In short, the concern with the blood Americans have spilled (or are spilling today) is not simply a response to the past, it is the sort of thing that has helped us all move forward.
Posted by Oscar on March 7,2013 | 11:13 AM
More anti-American pablum. "The Shocking Savagery of America’s Early History." Fine. Now try this: "The Shocking Savagery of ________'s Early History." Fill in the blank with ANY country's name, and you will not only find more egregious examples, but you will find them essentially for the entire history of the country. That, of course, is not the case with America, where we acknowledge our past, and do our best to atone for it. The Smithsonian is now in the tank of Leftism. That is why I canceled my subscription.
Posted by tps on March 7,2013 | 10:32 AM
What a turd of an article from a guilt-ridden America hater
Posted by RonRaygun on March 6,2013 | 08:18 PM
How Ironic! Antichristians always see their demons reflected in mirrors around them. Even today, we can see leaders of state doing the same thing, justifying their unholy wars in the name of secular holy ideals.
Posted by Padma Drago on March 5,2013 | 03:26 AM
The opening section of this essay falls into a common error found in most discussions of early New England--the conflation of the pilgrims with the Puritans. the Pilgrims did really tend to be tolerant and non-violent, but their era only lasted for ten years. In 1630, the Puritans arrived and imposed their very different rule upon the colony. Virtually all the moral and ethical failings we focus upon in this period belong to the Puritan influence. See Hawthorne for the puritan view of the "heathen wilderness."
Posted by william reedy on March 4,2013 | 09:12 PM
It is this type of slanting judgmental unnecessary that gives history a bad name. Sorry to see Smith going this way lately....or perhaps America just has no more in depth people ... everything is very surface and slight. I read better and more involved history than this article in eighth grade. Yea, I guess I am old.
Posted by lmcknight on March 4,2013 | 03:17 PM
Shock and surprise! Why, none of this was known to anyone...except, of course, for anyone who's ever read any of a thousand books on the era. The "new" Smithsonian continues on its inexorable journey to dumbed-down mediocrity. I'm sure your subscriber numbers are up, good for you. But fair warning re: your next headline--"Headless body in topless bar" has already been taken.
Posted by Joe Jones on March 4,2013 | 12:18 PM
Let me know what you think.
Posted by Michael Fitzgerald on March 4,2013 | 04:37 AM
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