In the Shadow of the Gallows
In the Shadow of the Gallows: Race, Crime, and American Civic Identity
Jeannine Marie DeLombard
Series: Haney Foundation Series
Copyright Date: 2012
Published by: University of Pennsylvania Press
Pages: 456
https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt3fj0kq
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In the Shadow of the Gallows
Book Description:

From Puritan Execution Day rituals to gangsta rap, the black criminal has been an enduring presence in American culture. To understand why, Jeannine Marie DeLombard insists, we must set aside the lenses of pathology and persecution and instead view the African American felon from the far more revealing perspectives of publicity and personhood. When the Supreme Court declared in Dred Scott that African Americans have "no rights which the white man was bound to respect," it overlooked the right to due process, which ensured that black offenders-even slaves-appeared as persons in the eyes of the law. In the familiar account of African Americans' historical shift "from plantation to prison," we have forgotten how, for a century before the Civil War, state punishment affirmed black political membership in the breach, while a thriving popular crime literature provided early America's best-known models of individual black selfhood. Before there was the slave narrative, there was the criminal confession. Placing the black condemned at the forefront of the African American canon allows us to see how a later generation of enslaved activists-most notably, Frederick Douglass-could marshal the public presence and civic authority necessary to fashion themselves as eligible citizens. At the same time, in an era when abolitionists were charging Americans with the national crime of "manstealing," a racialized sense of culpability became equally central to white civic identity. What, for African Americans, is the legacy of a citizenship grounded in culpable personhood? For white Americans, must membership in a nation built on race slavery always betoken guilt? In the Shadow of the Gallows reads classics by J. Hector St. John de Crèvecoeur, Edgar Allan Poe, Frederick Douglass, Herman Melville, George Lippard, and Edward Everett Hale alongside execution sermons, criminal confessions, trial transcripts, philosophical treatises, and political polemics to address fundamental questions about race, responsibility, and American civic belonging.

eISBN: 978-0-8122-0633-3
Subjects: Language & Literature
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  1. Front Matter
    Front Matter (pp. i-viii)
  2. Table of Contents
    Table of Contents (pp. ix-x)
  3. Introduction: How a Slave Was Made a Man
    Introduction: How a Slave Was Made a Man (pp. 1-48)

    Writing was an indispensable tool for the public assertion of black humanity in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, when millions of Africans and their descendants were being bought and sold as objects of property throughout the Atlantic world. Following the slave trade’s inaugural violence, a man was made a slave in early America through the scriptive technologies that enabled the recording, circulation, and preservation of colonial and then state statutes, state and federal constitutions, and judicial decisions, as well as passes, bills of sale, wills, and mortgages.¹ In such a world, writes Henry Louis Gates, Jr., “the recording of an...

  4. PART I
    • Chapter 1 Contracting Guilt: Mixed Character, Civil Slavery, and the Social Compact
      Chapter 1 Contracting Guilt: Mixed Character, Civil Slavery, and the Social Compact (pp. 51-86)

      With respect to citizenship, the query posed by Crèvecoeur’s fictional American farmer (himself a British colonist) would go formally unanswered from the Founding to the Civil War. Until passage of the Fourteenth Amendment (1868), the Constitution did not specify the terms of U.S. citizenship. Neither did it explicitly address the race slavery that, prior to Emancipation, stood in definitive opposition to citizenship.¹ Speaking on behalf of “We the People of the United States,” the document distinguished “free Persons” from those tacitly racialized “other Persons” who were to be partially enumerated for purposes of taxation and representation—as well as subject...

    • Chapter 2 Black Catalogues: Crime, Print, and the Rise of the Black Self
      Chapter 2 Black Catalogues: Crime, Print, and the Rise of the Black Self (pp. 87-116)

      Writing for the abolitionist National Era newspaper five years after Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin had debuted in its pages, prolific Southern novelist and death penalty critic E.D.E.N. Southworth concluded one of her popular serialized “nouvellettes” with a tableau that vividly illustrates the belated penal political membership accorded the enslaved condemned.¹ “The Brothers” tells the story of Valentine, the cosmopolitan, Shakespeare-reading, mixed-race slave who kills Oswald Waring, his half-brother, childhood companion, and now master, in a fit of enraged self-defense. When Execution Day arrives, Valentine is joined on the gallows by his fellow slave Governor, a “jet-black” naïf who...

  5. PART II
    • Chapter 3 The Ignominious Cord: Crime, Counterfactuals, and the New Black Politics
      Chapter 3 The Ignominious Cord: Crime, Counterfactuals, and the New Black Politics (pp. 119-163)

      The remarkable Address of Abraham Johnstone, A Black Man, Who Was Hanged at Woodbury, in the County of Glocester, and State of New Jersey, on Saturday the the [sic] 8th Day of July Last; To the People of Colour. To Which Is Added His Dying Confession or Declaration. Also, a Copy of a Letter to His Wife, Written the Day Previous to His Execution (1797) opens with an urgent invocation of temporality. “Brethren,” begins the emancipated Delaware slave and convicted murderer, “I address you at this (to me, and not only to me but to all mankind) solemn important and...

    • Chapter 4 The Work of Death: Time, Crime, and Personhood in Jacksonian America
      Chapter 4 The Work of Death: Time, Crime, and Personhood in Jacksonian America (pp. 164-205)

      Faced with the dilemma race slavery and its legacy posed to the new republic, such prominent Americans as Noah Webster, Thomas Jefferson, and St. George Tucker suggested that a slavery-engendered propensity for crime precluded blacks’ belated entry into the social compact. For his part, condemned ex-slave Abraham Johnstone held accountable not African Americans but the citizens who had yet to answer for their nation’s guilty past. The Address of Abraham Johnstone seized penal scrutiny of imputed black criminality as an occasion to call for political and legal reform, thereby anticipating antebellum abolitionists’ efforts to redraw the lines connecting slavery, crime,...

    • Chapter 5 How Freeman Was Made a Madman: Race, Capacity, and Citizenship
      Chapter 5 How Freeman Was Made a Madman: Race, Capacity, and Citizenship (pp. 206-251)

      In contrast with the thousands who flocked to early American Execution Day rituals, only about three hundred people attended the prison-yard hanging of Edward Coleman, and doubtless fewer still watched Dr. Chilton apply his Galvanic Multiplyer to the murderer’s corpse.¹ All the more important, then, that Edgar Allan Poe and others were able to follow the proceedings in print.² Withdrawn from the civic landscape, convicts more deeply penetrated the national imaginary.³ In keeping with the gradual legal reorientation from “individual lives to individual rights,” published crime accounts extended their reach beyond the communities directly affected by a particular offender’s acts...

    • Chapter 6 Who Aint a Slaver? Citizenship, Piracy, and Slaver Narratives
      Chapter 6 Who Aint a Slaver? Citizenship, Piracy, and Slaver Narratives (pp. 252-294)

      As initial reports of the Van Nest murders appeared throughout the spring of 1846, the press was also publicizing the seizure of the American slave ship, Pons, and the landing of its nearly nine hundred sick and dying African “recaptives” in Liberia.¹ Not long after papers had corrected initial, erroneous reports that the Auburn, New York, killer was “some one in disguise of a negro” by confirming that the suspect was in fact “a full-blooded negro named Wm. Freeman,” news began to trickle in from Monrovia that “the citizens of Liberia have suffered severely on account of the depredations of...

  6. Conclusion
    Conclusion (pp. 295-312)

    Let us return to the gallows portrait depicting “two sweeps, one of whom was represented as a negro, and the other as a mullato speaking the German language,” at prayer before their hanging for the murders of Pennsylvania Dutch matrons Anna Garber and Elizabeth Ream¹ (see Figure 8). The illustration from Das Manheimer Trauerspiel (1858) is a fascinating visual artifact. The delicate steel engraving of Henry Richards and Alexander Anderson on the Lancaster County scaffold offers a more nuanced version of the crude woodcuts that, since the colonial period, had portrayed the execution ritual in print. As the English-language edition...

  7. Notes
    Notes (pp. 313-380)
  8. Bibliography
    Bibliography (pp. 381-432)
  9. Index
    Index (pp. 433-442)
  10. Acknowledgments
    Acknowledgments (pp. 443-446)
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