The original Black elite Daniel Murray and the story of a forgotten era

Elizabeth Dowling Taylor

Book - 2017

"Chronicles a critical yet overlooked chapter in American history: the inspiring rise and calculated fall of the black elite, from Emancipation through Reconstruction to the Jim Crow Era, embodied in the experiences of an influential figure of the time, academic, entrepreneur, and political activist and black history pioneer Daniel Murray" -- provided by publisher.

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

973.00496/Taylor
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 973.00496/Taylor Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Published
New York, NY : Amistad, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers [2017]
Language
English
Main Author
Elizabeth Dowling Taylor (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
498 pages, 32 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations, map, plans, genealogical table ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 421-464) and index.
ISBN
9780062346094
  • Map: Daniel Murray's Washington
  • Prologue
  • 1. Up and Coming
  • 2. The Good Wife
  • 3. The Black Elite
  • 4. The Good Life
  • 5. The Good Citizen
  • 6. Activist Couple
  • 7. Backsliding
  • 8. Confronting Lost Ground
  • 9. National Afro-American Council
  • 10. Black History Pioneer
  • 11. Courting Controversy
  • 12. Struggling
  • 13. Father and Sons
  • 14. Disillusioned
  • 15. Life's Work
  • 16. Ironic Fruits
  • 17. New Negro/Old Cit
  • Epilogue
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Illustration Credits
  • Index
Review by New York Times Review

AS I LEARNED years ago as an African-American student at Harvard Law School, it is a disturbing exercise to review the anti-black legislation that this nation drafted and enforced during the 19th and early 20th centuries. Our elected leaders not only exercised their power to liberate and protect certain groups, they also used it to punish those same groups when the larger citizenry began to fear or resent their mere presence. It was evident when the country took the land and the lives of a once-thriving Native American population, and again when the government endorsed the internment of innocent Japanese-American families during World War II; it can be seen again today, as a new president uses rhetoric that demonizes Muslim American citizens. In her brilliantly researched "The Original Black Elite: Daniel Murray and the Story of a Forgotten Era," Elizabeth Dowling Taylor recounts the rise of African-Americans during the time of Reconstruction and their fall during the subsequent decades, when legislation was advanced in order to again segregate, impoverish and humiliate a population that many whites believed had gained too much. By tracing the ascent of Daniel Murray, the wealthy black civic leader, businessman and assistant librarian at the Library of Congress, Taylor reveals how black Americans after the Civil War benefited from opportunities afforded by Reconstruction policies. Out of this environment of tolerance grew a strong and dignified black community in Washington, where the black elite could advance in prominent jobs, build successful businesses, pursue education for themselves and their children, and purchase imposing homes. Although Daniel Murray was born free in 1851 - his father was a black lumberyard worker who had been manumitted in 1810, and his mother was a free woman of color - in Taylor's prologue we are first introduced to a 48-year-old Murray. By 1899, he was already a prominent government appointee, who had worked at the Library of Congress for more than 25 years and then served as one of its second-highest-ranking officials, assistant librarian. Murray had a seat on Washington's Board of Trade, a group of otherwise white businessmen that advised the government on taxation in the nation's capital. His wife, Anna Evans, was a confident black socialite who taught at local schools, attended Oberlin College and happened to be related to the highly regarded black United States senator Hiram Revels of Mississippi. Murray had sons who would later attend Harvard and Cornell. He had the ear of white co-workers and business leaders, and he often met with white congressmen and their staffers who needed his guidance when researching legislative history in the library's archives. On the morning of Oct. 2, 1899, Murray - dressed in a silk top hat and a Prince Albert coat - had just descended the steps of his three-story red-brick home in northwest D.C. and was on his way to board a plushly outfitted train car. The 40-some passengers - all white, except for Murray - made up a special welcoming committee appointed by President William McKinley, on the occasion of honoring Admiral George Dewey for his victory in Manila Bay. Despite an initial picture that suggests Murray embraced clichés of racial tranquillity, Taylor makes clear throughout her book that Murray and most of his black elite friends "did not crave the company of white people." Taylor, an independent scholar and the author of "A Slave in the White House: Paul Jennings and the Madisons," understands the mind-set of the black elite, and she quickly points out that despite his own rise to the top, "Daniel Murray was 'a race man to the core'": "If he took any pride in being the first black man to join this organization or the only one to be invited to that social occasion, his greater goal, his longrange vision, was to be in the vanguard of merit-based recognition for every American of color. The rise of those in Murray's black elite circle was realized rather than potential. Its members had attained high levels of education, achievement, culture. . . . They were living proof that African-Americans did not lack the ability to become useful contributors to mainstream society." As Taylor traces Murray's pre-Civil War childhood in Baltimore and his subsequent move to Washington, it becomes clear that his success - getting hired and promoted for his government job, purchasing real estate and building a reputation in the business community - was due to timing, connections and his ability to network with both whites and blacks. His older half brother, Samuel Proctor, was not only a successful Washington caterer whose client list included President Abraham Lincoln, but also the proprietor of one of the two restaurants in the Capitol. Because the restaurant, known as "the Senate Saloon," was located in the Senate wing, Murray was afforded the chance to make casual acquaintance with senators and members of their staffs once he began working there in 1869, when he was 18 , It was opportunities like this - in a more liberal, Republican-led government - that aided Murray's rise. And unlike many other cities with large African-American populations, Baltimore and Washington provided the ideal environment for upwardly mobile blacks. At the time of Murray's birth, 90 percent of the blacks living in Baltimore were free, giving it the largest free black population in the country. Washington, for its part, was a hub for the black elite because of the large number of government jobs and the establishment of Howard University, a magnet for black intellectuals and civic leaders. Taylor knows how to weave an emotional story of how race and class have long played a role in determining who succeeds and who fails. We get to meet many of Murray's friends and acquaintances, other members of the black elite. Howard's law school dean Richard T. Greener was a successful attorney after attending Phillips Academy and then Harvard University; he became Harvard's first black graduate in 1870. James Wormley owned the Wormley Hotel, a luxury establishment that opened in 1871 and catered to affluent white visitors. (In a bitter irony, it was also the reported site of the Hayes-Tilden Compromise of 1877, which marked the end of Reconstruction.) The newspaper publisher Pinckney Pinchback served as lieutenant governor and acting governor of Louisiana, and owned a mansion near the Chinese Embassy. Calvin Brent was Washington's first African-American architect. The civil rights activist Mary Church Terrell graduated from Oberlin College in 1884; her father was recognized as the first black millionaire in the South, and her husband was the first black municipal court judge in Washington. We also meet the United States senator Blanche Bruce of Mississippi, who later served appointments under four presidents. BUT THE READER shouldn't expect a happy ending in "The Original Black Elite." The rug of opportunity and dignity was abruptly pulled out from under the nation's African-American population. Murray and his circle watched nervously as white politicians and their own neighbors betrayed them. Angry white Southerners and the Ku Klux Klan claimed that blacks had come too far; Jim Crow laws denied African-Americans access to specific jobs, public facilities, restaurants, transportation; and cynical politicians galvanized white support by publicly demonizing African-Americans. After taking office in March 1913, Woodrow Wilson oversaw the segregation of federal offices, demoting and firing black employees; the few who were allowed to stay were suddenly required to use "colored only" bathrooms and eating areas. Murray's life spanned the beginning and the end of an era. While he enjoyed many years of integrated experiences in Washington, just 12 years after Wilson's inauguration and 74 years after he was born, Taylor writes, "Daniel Murray died in a segregated hospital and was buried in a segregated graveyard." Murray and his circle watched nervously as white politicians betrayed them. LAWRENCE OTIS GRAHAM is an attorney and the author of "Our Kind of People: Inside America's Black Upper Class" and "The Senator and the Socialite: The True Story of America's First Black Dynasty."

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [January 1, 2017]
Review by Booklist Review

Just after the Civil War, when government appointments were the most prestigious paths for black success, Daniel Murray was the assistant librarian at the Library of Congress. He and his wife were from families of privilege, activism, and mixed-race heritage, all elements common to the growing black upper class. The black aristocracy had its own private clubs and events to mirror white society. They worked hard for their own advance and for the uplift of lower-class blacks. Murray was a founder of the National Afro-American Council, forerunner of the NAACP, and served on the D.C. Board of Trade, advocating for a public library, vocational training, and civil-service reform. Historian Taylor details the lives of Murray and other black elites who sustained themselves through government appointments, private investments, and professions as doctors, lawyers, and barbers even as they struggled with intraracial tensions. Taylor also details the precipitous fall of the elite as white-supremacist politicians ushered in the era of Jim Crow, crushing the achievements of a class and race of people who had worked so hard to defy racial limitations.--Bush, Vanessa Copyright 2017 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Library Journal Review

This new history from New York Times best-selling author Taylor follows the life of Daniel Murray, an exemplary -member of postbellum Washington, DC, and America's wealthy and well-educated black elite. © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A lively work chronicling the growth of the educated African-American movers and shakers in Washington, D.C., on the brink of renewed Jim Crow laws.A longtime employee of the Library of Congress who wrote a significant bibliography of African-American literature, Daniel Murray (1851-1925), born to freedmen in Baltimore, ushered in a new class of educated black people advocating for reform in the nation's capital. In this thorough work of research, Taylor (A Slave in the White House: Paul Jennings and the Madisons, 2012) focuses on Murray and his family as participants in the wave of hopeful race relations after the Civil War; ultimately, they had to come to grips with setbacks by the turn of the century. Murray and his family, mostly illiterate, were part of the "firsts" who moved to D.C. after the war. The young Murray, following his older brother, worked as a waiter in restaurants on the ground floor of the Capitol. Having been educated in Christian schools, he got a job under Librarian of Congress Ainsworth Rand Spofford as a personal assistant and eventually head of periodicals. Light-skinned, bright, and ambitious, Murray dabbled lucratively in real estate and was a model citizen chosen for President William McKinley's inauguration committee; he married a woman of illustrious abolitionist background from Oberlin, Ohio, Anna Evans, and together they formed a "power couple" in black activist Washington, joining many reform causese.g., Anna's devotion to creating kindergartens for African-American children. The author chronicles how two different intellectualsBooker T. Washington and W.E.B. Du Boisapproached African-American concerns at the time and how one of the first black political groups was Murray's National Afro-American Council, which eventually morphed into today's NAACP. Murray's special assignment research for the American Negro Exhibit at the Paris Exposition in 1900 would lead to his lifelong work culling African-American bibliographythe beginning of today's black studies. As Taylor demonstrates, Murray was a pioneer and patriot. Important research on an overlooked but significant figure. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.