The First African American Author

On July 11, 1761 a slave ship named The Phillis carrying hundreds of human cargo from present day Gambia including an 8 year old girl. The name her parents gave her as they looked into her new born eyes has been lost to history. 1/
What we do know is that she was enslaved in Boston by John Wheatley, a wealthy merchant who gifted the young girl to his wife, Susanna. They re-named the girl Phillis after the slave ship that snatched her from her family and gave her the last name Wheatley.
2/
The Wheatleys’ 18 year old daughter began to tutor Phillis & seeing her unique aptitude, it became a family affair. By age 12, Phillis was reading Greek & Latin classical literature. Phillis wrote her first poem at 14. 3/
At age 20, she was sent to England with one of the Wheatley family sons. There, Selina Hastings, a Methodist revivalist, sponsored the publication of a book of her poems titled “Poems on Various Subjects, Religious and Moral.” It sent shockwaves throughout Europe & the U.S.! 4/
Wheatley wrote with a poetic resistance that dazzled with lines like: Some view our sable race with scornful eye,
"Their colour is a diabolic dye."
Remember, Christians, Negroes, black as Cain,
May be refin'd, and join th' angelic train.” #Barz 5/
The idea of racial superiority made it difficult for most white readers to believe that an enslaved African wrote poetry. She even had to defend her authorship in court!
Wheatley thought the power of poetry was as limitless as the God she wrote so frequently about. 6/
Right after the publication of the book, the Wheatleys emancipated her. She married John Peters a freed black man in 1778, 5 years after her publication of the book. Once freed, the “progressives” who had celebrated her moved on. Her and her husband loss 2 babies in poverty. 7/
Her husband was in prisoned for indebtedness in 1784 & she died a few months later at age of 31. In 1773, she was considered the most famous African in the world. Voltaire, the French philosopher wrote to a friend that Phillis “proved that black people could write poetry.” 8/
Amazing to think white supremacy was so entrenched in the 1770’s that the mere act of writing poetry would be with such astonishment. Wheatley was shaped by the complexity of living in such a world. 9/
Her legacy is every Black person who has put pen to paper in such a world knowing their very brilliance is a form of resistance. When Amanda Gorman delivers powerful poetry that stuns the world at 22 years old, I think of Phillis Wheatley 248 years ago. #BlackHistoryMonth 10/10

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Rasool Berry

Rasool Berry Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @rasoolberry

7 Feb
Cecil B. Moore was born in West Virginia in 1915. A Black WWII vet, Moore’s fight for freedom He said: “I was determined when I got back (from World War II) that what rights I didn't have I was going to take, using every weapon in the arsenal of democracy.” 1/ Image
He moved to Philly became a lawyer & served as the local NAACP president. In 1964 he began to fight the biggest battle of his life. 2/
Moore was based in North Philly, which was mostly poor & working class Black folk, but in the heart of the ‘hood stood an enormous 45 acre, private boarding school with neoclassical marble buildings called Girard College. 3/
Read 10 tweets
5 Feb
Heard of Marcus Garvey? WEB DuBois? Malcolm X?

Then you have Alexander Crummell, the father of Pan-Africanism, to thank. Crummell was born in NYC to a free mother & formerly enslaved father in 1819. His grandfather was from Sierre Leone, when he was enslaved at 13 years old. 1/
His father never let him forget that his story was tied to the African Diaspora. Motivated by their Christian faith & sense of solidarity, the Crummells worked as abolitionists. Their home was the publishing site of Freedom’s Journal, the FIRST African American newspaper. 2/
Seeing his brilliance, he was sent to a school in New Hampshire run by abolitionists. But it was burned down by racists neighbors. He sensed a calling by God to be an Episcopal priest, however, because he was black, he was refused admission to seminary. 3/
Read 9 tweets
4 Feb
In her autobiography, Rosa Parks debunked the myth that she refused to vacate her seat because she was tired after a long day at work. “I was not tired physically,” she wrote, “I was not old, I was forty-two. No, the only tired I was, was tired of giving in.” #BlackHistoryMonth
Parks was sitting in the middle section of the bus open to African Americans . After the “whites-only” section filled up & a white man was left standing, the driver demanded that Parks & 3 others in the row leave their seats. While the other three eventually moved, Parks did not.
Her act of civil disobedience was not pre-meditated. She did not set out to be arrested. Parks wrote that she was so preoccupied that day that if she hadn’t failed to notice that a notorious racist was the driver, “I wouldn’t even have gotten on that bus.”
Read 9 tweets
24 Nov 20
Part 2 of @JohnPiper message on CRT - like the 1st - contains & confusing combination of helpful & unhelpful statements which are worth commenting on. Helpful: he follows my lead in using a broad definition of CRT & affirms value in that definition. Unhelpful: 1/
He fails to use the interdisciplinary analysis I have been trained in & which is needed to contextualize the complexity of race, racial injustice, & evangelicalism’s historic failure to adequately address these concerns Biblically. 2/
As a result, he misses the point by never asking WHY is the CRT issue being raised at all. It's a monster in the church w/o a Dr. Frankenstein claiming it. It’s a slander similar to ‘cultural Marxism’ which the church fails to understand bc you cant analyze what you demonize. 3/
Read 11 tweets
23 Nov 20
I’m grateful @johnpiper engaged with my discussion w/ @neilshenvi on @UnbelievableJB @ #CRT in a genuine manner & yet his comments regarding my thoughts & words require some clarification & expansion. 1/
.@JohnPiper is absolutely right that the CRT label has been used as slander to reject those who talk about racism & systemic injustice as being unbiblical. He’s also correct in the caution that we shouldn’t dismiss epistemological concerns because of “blood in the streets.” 2/
He’s also correct in the caution that we shouldn’t dismiss epistemological concerns bc of “blood in the streets.” Ideas matter too. & people shouldn’t be silenced. I appreciate that he said that I didn’t seek to do that, he seemed to misunderstand why I brought it up. 4/
Read 10 tweets
11 Nov 20
👉🏾But I see that we are, to a great extent, producing a self-collapsing Christianity, insofar as our converts are told that the only important thing to do is to win more converts. It’s like getting the people into the armed forces, and they ask what they are supposed to do. 1/
Oh well, you are supposed to recruit.” Then they recruit more and more people, and set them also to recruiting still other people. Some day someone says, “Aren’t we supposed to be fighting a war?” “Oh yeah, there’s a war.” ... 2/
Church Mission-which is absolutely basic & absolutely valid-is to extend the faith & transform people into reliable people of integrity. Kingdom Mission is when the church stops thinking abt itself & its members & pursues God’s will in this world, not just pursues more members.3/
Read 8 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Too expensive? Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal Become our Patreon

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us on Twitter!