Prøve GULL - Gratis
The Years of Jubilee
The Atlantic
|December 2023
In 1871, the choir of the struggling Fisk University engaged in a gambit to save the school: It decided to go on a singing tour of America. The choir achieved more than its members could have imagined.
One of the treasures of Black history is preserved in a plain gray box, stashed away in a quiet room. In Nashville one morning, as the Fisk University campus shimmered in the summer heat, I walked into the archives of the Franklin Library to see it: a collection of papers from just after the Civil War about the founding of the university and others like it. I put on a pair of white cloth gloves to handle the pages. The stories I read in the collection were real, but they also felt to me like cosmology, recounting the beginnings of Black institutions I love and the arduous labors and journeys of the people who made them. The world described in the archive seemed especially malleable: open to possibility, and open to being shaped according to the hopes of the Black people in it.
One story in particular stood out, from the diary of a young woman named Ella Sheppard. In the summer of 1871, she was stuck waiting for a train home, in a hotel somewhere in the middle of Tennessee.
She was traveling with a group of students, also Black, back to Nashville after singing at a concert in Memphis. Traveling in the South was dangerous for any Black person, let alone for a coed group of students making their way through the state where the Ku Klux Klan had recently been founded.
According to Sheppard's diary, the presence of the Black singers did indeed attract attention. A mob of local white men, engaged in what another source euphemistically described as "electioneering," began to threaten the students. As Sheppard recalled in her diary, the troupe left the hotel with the mob still in tow and walked to the railroad stop, where the choir began to sing a hymn. The mob melted away. As the train approached, Sheppard wrote, only the leader of the mob remained.
Denne historien er fra December 2023-utgaven av The Atlantic.
Abonner på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av kuraterte premiumhistorier og over 9000 magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
FLERE HISTORIER FRA The Atlantic
The Atlantic
THE BEACON OF DEMOCRACY GOES DARK
For nearly 250 years, America promoted freedom and equality abroad, even when it failed to live up to those ideals itself. Not anymore.
8 mins
November 2025
The Atlantic
WHOSE INDEPENDENCE?
The question of what Jefferson meant by \"all men\" has defined American law and politics for too long.
15 mins
November 2025
The Atlantic
WE HOLD THESE TURKEYS TO BE DELICIOUS
When John Adams arrived in Philadelphia for the First Continental Congress, he immediately went out to eat.
5 mins
November 2025
The Atlantic
AMERICA'S MOST FAMOUS NAP
How “Rip Van Winkle” became our founding folktale
11 mins
November 2025
The Atlantic
THE MANY LIVES OF ELIZA SCHUYLER
She lived for 97 years. Only 24 of them were with Alexander Hamilton.
17 mins
November 2025
The Atlantic
THE MORAL FOUNDATION OF AMERICA
The idea that everyone has intrinsic rights to life and liberty was a radical break with millennia of human history. It's worth preserving.
5 mins
November 2025
The Atlantic
THE NIGHTMARE OF DESPOTISM
Hamilton feared the mob. Jefferson warned against unchecked elites. But both thought that the republic could fall.
11 mins
November 2025
The Atlantic
THE 27TH GRIEVANCE
How Native nations shaped the Revolution
9 mins
November 2025
The Atlantic
LINCOLN'S REVOLUTION
How he used America's past to rescue its future
10 mins
November 2025
The Atlantic
DEAR SON
How the revolution tore apart the Franklin family
19 mins
November 2025
Translate
Change font size
