Rebecca Primus

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Rebecca Primus
Group photograph of Black church members standing in several rows in front of the church.
Only known photograph of Primus, 2nd row in the middle, wearing large hat with flowers or ruffles
Born
Rebecca Primus

(1836-07-10)July 10, 1836
Hartford, Connecticut
DiedFebruary 21, 1932(1932-02-21) (aged 95)
Hartford, Connecticut
Resting placeZion Hill Cemetery (Hartford, Connecticut)
Other namesRebecca Thomas
OccupationTeacher
Years active1860–1932

Rebecca Primus (July 10, 1837 – February 21, 1932) was a free African-American woman from Connecticut and is one of the few African-American women whose work in Reconstruction programs has been documented. Her life offers insight into the differences and similarities between free people and former slaves in the North and South and their experiences with racism and sexism in the period between the American Civil War and the Great Depression.

Primus was born into a prominent Black family in Hartford, Connecticut, and attended the First African School, located in the basement of the Talcott Street Congregational Church. After graduating in 1853, she opened a private school in her home. She taught there until 1865, when she was selected as one of the first two teachers and the only Black teacher from Hartford to go to the South to participate in the Freedmen's Bureau program to educate recently freed slaves. She established the first school for Black students in the local church of Royal Oak, Maryland, and within two years raised sufficient funds to build a separate school, named the Primus Institute in her honor. She taught there until 1869, when the Freedmen's Bureau was dissolved and funding ran out. Returning to Hartford, she worked as a seamstress and taught Sunday school at the Talcott Street church. In 1870, she was appointed assistant to the superintendent of Sunday school, making her the first woman to hold a management post at the church. She served until her marriage in 1873, and after a period of some years, returned to the position in 1881.

From 1859 to 1868, Primus wrote letters to her romantic friend, Addie Brown. Although Brown's side of the correspondence has been preserved, Primus's letters have not been found. She also wrote to her own family, discussing her insights into both the communities of Royal Oak and Hartford. Most of her papers were acquired by the Connecticut Museum of Culture and History in Hartford in 1934 and an additional group of correspondence to her was obtained by Harvard University's Schlesinger Library in 2017. The letters have been studied by numerous scholars as they provide a rare glimpse of the Black community from an insider's point of view.

Early life and education[edit]

Rebecca Primus was born on July 10, 1836,[Notes 1] in Hartford, Connecticut, to Mehitable Esther (née Jacobs), known as Hettie, and Holdridge Primus.[2][3][4] Her younger siblings were Nelson, Henrietta, and Isabella "Bell".[2] Her family were prominent members of Hartford's Black community.[5] Holdridge worked at Humphrey and Seyms as a grocery clerk. Mehitable was a seamstress,[6] who taught other young women to sew and worked as a midwife.[7] She also helped members of the Black community, providing boarding rooms and employment networks, particularly for young women.[8] Holdridge's maternal grandfather, Gad Asher, was kidnapped from Guinea, West Africa, in the 1740s and transported to Connecticut by slave traders. There he was sold to a man named Bishop and taken to East Guilford.[9] Called into military service in 1777, Bishop used a law that allowed a slave owner to forgo military service by sending a slave in his place.[10] Asher enlisted and served from 1777 to 1783, using his military pension to purchase his freedom. Once free, he married a free Black woman and moved to Branford, where he worked as a farmer.[11] Mehitable's father, Jeremiah Jacobs, Sr. was the first free Black man to settle in Hartford. He was a self-employed cobbler.[6][12]

Engraving of a single-story square building with basement and ground-level windows visible.
Talcott Street Congregational Church, 1879, where Primus attended church and school in the basement

The family were members of the Talcott Street Congregational Church,[6] whose pastor was the former slave and abolitionist, James W. C. Pennington. Pennington and his wife Harriet (née Walker) also taught at the school attended by the Primus children,[13] known as the First African School, and located in the church basement.[13] Primus began attending at the age of five, and after the Penningtons, was taught by Augustus Washington and Selah Africanus.[14] The school was underfunded and lacked adequate textbooks, relying on the instructors to supplement the available reading materials.[15] An avid reader, Primus read novels and literary works, history books and biographies, religious texts, and the Black press. The family made excursions to Boston, New York, and Philadelphia to hear music and cultural presentations.[16] In 1849, they bought a house at 20 Wadsworth Street.[6][17] The house was mortgaged and in hopes of paying it off, Holdridge agreed to go with his employer, C. N. Humphrey, to the California gold fields. Holdridge was in California from 1849 to 1853, leaving Mehitable to care for the family in his absence.[18] Although he did not find gold, Holdridge worked for Alvin Adams's delivery company in Sacramento and was able to secure funds for his passage home and pay off the mortgage.[19] By the time that he returned to Connecticut, Primus had completed her schooling.[20]

Primus's approach to life was careful and exacting, backed by high standards for both herself and her community. She was proud of her intellect and her ability to earn a living. As she saw it as a moral duty to uplift her community, she tried to be a role model. Whatever the consequences, she treated White people with respect only if they gave respect to her.[21][22] She enjoyed learning and the company of teachers and intellectuals.[23] Primus was class conscious and strove to live as a respectable woman.[21] She believed it was her duty to actively help others become educated, find suitable employment, and learn about their rights.[24] An avid church-goer, she attended services weekly and read the Bible every day. In her later years, she was described by friends and neighbors as having a saintly demeanor.[4]

Career[edit]

Handwritten poem on a page
"I've Lost a Day", Primus, 1854

Primus, who assisted in the education of her younger siblings, opened a private school for girls in the family home by 1860.[25] Around this time, she befriended Addie Brown, who had possibly been boarding with the family for a while.[8] Their friendship became so close that Mehitable acknowledged, when questioned by friends about their relationship, that had one of them been a man, they would have married.[26][27] During this period, Primus also wrote poetry and at least one essay, which were preserved in her papers.[14][28]

At the end of the American Civil War (1863), the country entered the reconstruction era and legislation was passed in 1865, to establish a social-welfare program to assist former slaves in transitioning from bondage to a life of freedom. The Freedmen's Bureau, under the authority of the war department, coordinated the assistance programs offered to freedmen.[29] That year, Primus was one of two teachers selected by Calvin Stowe, husband of Harriet Beecher Stowe and head of the Freedmen's Aid Society of Hartford, to participate in the Freedmen's Bureau program to educate southern Black students.[30][Notes 2] The society eventually sent three other teachers south, but Primus was the only Black educator from Hartford.[31] She took a train from Hartford to New York City in November 1865, and then made her way through Jersey City and Philadelphia, before arriving in Baltimore.[32] There, the forty-seven Black teachers and thirty-one White ones were segregated by race and assigned to schools by the Freedmen's Aid Society of Baltimore.[33] Within a week, she was aboard a boat and headed to the village of Royal Oak, Maryland.[34]

Primus was provided with room and board by Charles and Sarah Thomas. Charles was appointed as a trustee of the school Primus was to establish.[35] He was born in 1834 and belonged to Mrs. Richard Adams of Talbot County, Maryland. He purchased his manumission in 1859 and worked as a horse trainer on the estate of Edward Lloyd, who had owned a property where Frederick Douglass was enslaved.[36][37] Within a month, Primus opened the school in the local Black church,[38] initially teaching thirty-six students.[39] Soon she had seventy-five, both children and adults,[40] of whom very few could read or knew the alphabet. Very quickly the students were reading and advanced to learn writing and to study geography and mathematics.[39] Primus also introduced sewing for the girls and oration and music for all of her pupils.[41] In addition to her educational work, she set up a Sunday school and did all the administrative work required to report to the three agencies supervising her work: the Freedman's Bureau and the Freedman's Aid Societies of Baltimore and Hartford.[42]

Single-story building in a field, flanked with trees
The Primus Institute, circa 1973

Primus set about collecting funds and materials to build a separate school building. When negotiations with a White landowner failed, Thomas provided a parcel of his own land for the project.[43] The Freedmen's Aid Society of Hartford provided lumber and the women of the Talcott Street Congregational Church held fundraisers to pay for its construction.[44][45] Other lumber was secured through the Baltimore Freedman's Aid Society and the Freedman's Bureau provided desks for the students.[46] By November 1867, the school was completed and after a vote by the community at its dedication was named the Primus Institute.[47] The Freedman's Bureau was dissolved by the US Congress in 1869. Lacking funds to continue the work, Primus returned to Connecticut,[42] although the school continued to operate in her absence.[48] She discovered that in her absence Black and White schools had been merged, but only White teachers were eligible for employment.[49] She secured work as an agent for a publishing company in 1870.[50] That year, she also was appointed as an assistant to the superintendent of Sunday School at the Talcott Street Church. It was the first time that a woman had been appointed to manage the church's affairs. She remained in the post until 1873.[51]

Around 1872, Thomas moved north alone, no longer married.[37][52][Notes 3] He and Primus married on March 25, 1873, and rented a home near her parents.[52] They had a son Ernest Primus Thomas in 1875, who died seven months later.[54] Thomas initially worked as a gardener for Albert Day, then as a self-employed gardener,[36] but a head injury left him unable to work consistently and he remained partially disabled for the remainder of his life. After Thomas's injury, Primus became the primary wage earner for the family and worked with her mother as a seamstress.[52] In 1881, Primus returned to her position as assistant superintendent of the Talcott Street Church's Sunday School.[51] Thomas served as the doorkeeper for the Connecticut State Senate until 1886.[36] He died in Hartford in 1891[36] and after his death, Primus returned to the family home on Wadsworth Street.[6] Her father had died in 1884,[55] and when her mother died in 1899, their home was sold. Primus moved in with her sister Bell and her husband William Edwards' family,[56] at 115 Adelaide Street.[57] She taught Sunday School classes at the Talcott Street Church until her death.[6]

Death and legacy[edit]

Primus died in Hartford on February 21, 1932,[58] and was buried in Zion Hill Cemetery in her family's plot.[1][58] Most of Primus's papers were acquired by the Connecticut Museum of Culture and History in Hartford in 1934.[59][60] A dress that she wore, possibly her wedding dress, is owned by the Wadsworth Atheneum.[61] In 2017, the Schlesinger Library of Harvard University acquired a collection of forty-one additional letters which had been written to Primus.[62][63] Although history has typically failed to reflect that Black women participated in the programs of Reconstruction, even in the work Black Reconstruction in America by W. E. B. Du Bois, Primus's life provides evidence of the importance of Black women who went to The South as teachers for newly freed slaves. Their roles extended beyond the schoolhouse and into the homes of community members to uplift and encourage Black people.[2] According to scholar Barbara Beeching, Primus was the only Black teacher sent from Hartford during Reconstruction.[42]

As there had previously been no schoolhouse for Black students, Primus founded the first school for African Americans in Royal Oak, Maryland, and it was named after her, which would have been highly unusual.[42] The Primus Institute continued to operate as a school until 1929.[48] The building that was believed to be the Primus Institute stood in Royal Oak until damaged by two arsons in 2000,[31][Notes 4] which forced its demolition because the Maryland Historical Trust was unable to secure restoration funding or listing on the National Register of Historic Places.[65][66] In 1992, the board of directors of the women's shelter and transitional housing facility "My Sister's Place" in Hartford, decided to name their apartments after prominent Hartford women. Primus was among the first seven women to be honored with her name on one of the twenty units.[40]

Coorespondence with Addie Brown[edit]

Because of negative stereotypes of Black women, it has been historically rare that their personal details were made public.[59] From the 1970s when new fields of study were created,[67][68] increased scholarship on women and non-White people has disproved myths that Black women did not leave records, keep diaries and journals, or write letters.[59] In the papers acquired by the Connecticut Museum of Culture and History are sixty letters from Primus to her family, one hundred and fifty letters from Brown to Primus,[69][Notes 5] over the period from 1859 to 1868, and twenty-four letters from Nelson Primus.[5][61][Notes 6] The letters provide an insight into the personal thoughts, political consciousness, encounters with racism and sexism and the public and private lives of ordinary black women between the Reconstruction era and Great Depression.[70] The letters present an unfiltered glimpse into the lives of Primus and Brown as they were not written like slave narratives or works created during the Harlem Renaissance to be consumed by a White audience.[69] The authors of the letters were neither former slaves, nor abolitionists, but dealt with both the repercussions of segregation and patriarchy.[71]

Numerous scholars and writers have evaluated the letters,[72] and concluded that they showed love and desire in historic contexts that do not necessarily fit into the current constructs of sexuality.[71][73][74] They do not reinforce historic stereotypes of Black women's sensuality. Primus and Brown were neither promiscuous harlots nor asexual, nurturing mammies.[71] The letters show that they had an intense friendship which was similar in many ways to other romantic friendships in the nineteenth century, characterized by professions of love, affection, and strong emotional ties. In other ways they differ, as they speak of their sisterhood and bonds of community, efforts at racial uplift, as well as making "explicit references to erotic interactions" between the two women.[75] Sociologist Karen Hansen, noted that what she called "bosom sex",[76][77] and what historian Leila J. Rupp termed "touching of the breasts",[78] was clear in its eroticism and unlikely to be found in White romantic narratives of the period.[76] However, in the absence of Primus's letters to Brown, the true nature of their relationship is difficult to assess.[5] The letters are significant because they illustrate the complexity of human relationships of their era.[74][79] They are also important documents in broadening the historical understanding of northern Black women, free people of color, and women writers.[79]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Date calculated from age at death, 95 years 7 months 11 days.[1]
  2. ^ According the Beeching, the teachers who were selected by the society were required to meet the requirements of normal school education and pass an examination. It is unknown how Primus acquired the credentials required.[30]
  3. ^ David O. White, who directed the museum of the Connecticut State Library and worked as an archivist for the Connecticut Historical Commission,[31] noted that when he visited Royal Oak in the 1970s, he could find no evidence of the death of Sarah Thomas. He discovered that she had deeded her portion of the property she jointly owned with Charles to him in 1871. Charles then handed over management of the property in December to William Tilgham and instructed him to pay off any debts owed on it and collect the rents. Thomas family recollections were that he then abandoned Sarah who died of a broken heart. White stated, "My personal journey in the study of Rebecca and her values makes me believe that somewhere in the records of Maryland is a different explanation".[53]
  4. ^ Local historians verified that the building that burned matched the dimensions described in Primus's letters and reported that the building had been reported as a school house through the 1920s. They were unable to positively identify the burned structure as the Primus Institute,[42] primarily because land records did not refer to it by that name, but instead as "black school" #2. The building, originally stood on Hopkins Neck Road, where a cemetery is now located and may have been moved.[48] Students who attended the school in the 1920s knew it only as the Royal Oak School.[64]
  5. ^ Primus's letters to Brown have not been located.[5][69]
  6. ^ Brown died January 11, 1870.[5]

References[edit]

Citations[edit]

  1. ^ a b Hale 1937, p. 205.
  2. ^ a b c Griffin 1999, p. 10.
  3. ^ Beeching 2016, p. 31.
  4. ^ a b White 1999, p. 283.
  5. ^ a b c d e Holladay 1999, p. H3.
  6. ^ a b c d e f Griffin 1999, p. 12.
  7. ^ Beeching 2016, p. 42.
  8. ^ a b Griffin 1999, p. 18.
  9. ^ Beeching 2016, pp. 3–5.
  10. ^ Beeching 2016, pp. 6–7.
  11. ^ Beeching 2016, pp. 7–8.
  12. ^ Beeching 1996, p. Northeast-17.
  13. ^ a b Beeching 2016, p. 47.
  14. ^ a b Beeching 2016, p. 109.
  15. ^ Beeching 2016, pp. 52, 65.
  16. ^ Griffin 1999, p. 13.
  17. ^ Beeching 1996, p. 17.
  18. ^ Beeching 2016, pp. 60–62.
  19. ^ Beeching 2016, pp. 63–65.
  20. ^ Beeching 2016, p. 65.
  21. ^ a b Hansen 1996, p. 181.
  22. ^ Griffin 1999, p. 15, 99-100.
  23. ^ Hansen 1994, p. 45.
  24. ^ Griffin 1999, pp. 99–100.
  25. ^ Beeching 2016, pp. 65, 72.
  26. ^ Beeching 2016, pp. 142–143.
  27. ^ Rupp 2002, p. 52.
  28. ^ Griffin 1999, pp. 16–17.
  29. ^ Bean 2016, p. 1.
  30. ^ a b Beeching 2016, p. 110.
  31. ^ a b c Dunn 2001b, p. 1A.
  32. ^ Beeching 2016, p. 111.
  33. ^ Beeching 2016, pp. 111–112.
  34. ^ Beeching 2016, p. 113.
  35. ^ Beeching 2016, p. 114.
  36. ^ a b c d The Hartford Courant 1891, p. 1.
  37. ^ a b Griffin 1999, p. 77.
  38. ^ Beeching 2016, p. 120.
  39. ^ a b Dunn 2001d, p. 1A.
  40. ^ a b Neyer 1992, p. C3.
  41. ^ Beeching 2016, p. 122.
  42. ^ a b c d e Dunn 2001d, p. 13A.
  43. ^ Beeching 2016, p. 124.
  44. ^ The Hartford Courant 1867a, p. 8.
  45. ^ The Hartford Courant 1867b, p. 8.
  46. ^ Beeching 2016, p. 125.
  47. ^ The Hartford Courant 1867c, p. 8.
  48. ^ a b c Dunn 2001b, p. 13A.
  49. ^ Beeching 2016, p. 172.
  50. ^ The Hartford Courant 1870, p. 2.
  51. ^ a b Beeching 2016, p. 170.
  52. ^ a b c Beeching 2016, p. 177.
  53. ^ White 1999, p. 281.
  54. ^ Beeching 2016, p. 178.
  55. ^ White 1999, p. 282.
  56. ^ Beeching 2016, pp. 185–186.
  57. ^ Correia 2022.
  58. ^ a b The Hartford Courant 1932, p. 4.
  59. ^ a b c Griffin 1999, p. 3.
  60. ^ White 1999, p. 284.
  61. ^ a b Beeching 1996, p. Northeast-12.
  62. ^ Englehart & Sinclair 2017.
  63. ^ Swann Galleries 2017.
  64. ^ Dunn 2001c, p. 1A.
  65. ^ Dunn 2001a, pp. 1A, 11A.
  66. ^ The Star-Democrat 2006, p. 15.
  67. ^ Lerner 1988.
  68. ^ Asante & Mazama 2005, p. xxvii.
  69. ^ a b c Griffin 1999, p. 4.
  70. ^ Griffin 1999, pp. 4–5.
  71. ^ a b c Griffin 1999, p. 5.
  72. ^ Beeching 2016, p. xvi.
  73. ^ Beeching 2016, p. 141.
  74. ^ a b Battle & Bennett 2008, p. 414.
  75. ^ Griffin 1999, pp. 6–7.
  76. ^ a b Sueyoshi 2010, p. 160.
  77. ^ Hansen 1996, p. 183.
  78. ^ Rupp 2002, p. 51.
  79. ^ a b Griffin 1999, p. 7.

Bibliography[edit]