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Robert Purvis

Robert Purvis (August 4, 1810 – April 15, 1898) was an American abolitionist in the United States. He was born in Charleston, South Carolina, and was likely educated at Amherst Academy, a secondary school in Amherst, Massachusetts. He spent most of his life in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. In 1833 he helped found the American Anti-Slavery Society and the Library Company of Colored People. From 1845 to 1850 he served as president of the Pennsylvania Anti-Slavery Society and also traveled to Britain to gain support for the movement.

Robert Purvis
Purvis c.1840–1849
Born(1810-08-04)August 4, 1810
DiedApril 15, 1898(1898-04-15) (aged 87)
NationalityAmerican
Known forAbolitionist, Underground Railroad
Spouse(s)Harriet Forten Purvis
Tracy Townsend
Children8, including Harriet Purvis, Jr., Charles Burleigh Purvis
Signature

Of mixed race, Purvis and his brothers were three-quarters European by ancestry and inherited considerable wealth from their native British father after his death in 1826. Purvis's parents had lived in a common law marriage, prevented from marrying because his mother was a free woman of color, of Moroccan and Jewish descent. The sons chose to identify with the black community and used their education and wealth to support abolition of slavery and anti-slavery activities, as well as projects in education to help the advance of African Americans.

Early life

Purvis was born in 1810 in Charleston, South Carolina. His maternal grandparents were Dido Badaraka, a former enslaved woman, and Baron Judah, a Jewish American native of Charleston. His mother Harriet Judah was born a free woman of color. Purvis's father was a immigrant from Great Britain.

As an adult, Purvis told a reporter about his family. His maternal grandmother, Badaraka, was kidnapped at age 12 from Morocco, transported to South Carolina on a slave ship, and sold as a slave in Charleston. He described her as a full-blooded Moor, dark-skinned with tightly curled hair. She was freed at age 19 by her master's will.[2][3] Harriet's father was Baron Judah, born in Charleston of German Jewish and Spanish-Portuguese Jewish descent.[1] Baron was the third of ten children born to Hillel Judah, a German Jewish immigrant, and Charleston native Abigail Seixas, his Spanish-Portuguese Jewish wife.

Purvis told the reporter that his grandparents Badaraka and Judah had married. This claim has been questioned by 21st-century biographers, given the social prominence of the Judah family in Charleston. Judah's parents owned slaves. In any case, Badaraka and Judah had a relationship for several years, and had two children together, Harriet and her brother. In 1790, Judah broke off his relationship with Badaraka when he moved with his parents from Charleston to Savannah, Georgia. In 1791 he moved to Richmond, Virginia. There he married a Jewish white woman and had four children with her.[4]

William Purvis was from Northumberland. His father died while he was a child, and his mother moved to Edinburgh for her sons' education. He immigrated to the United States as a young man with some of his brothers to make their fortunes. William became a wealthy cotton salesman in Charleston and was a naturalized United States citizen.[1][5]

William Purvis and Harriet Judah lived together as husband and wife, but racial law prevented their marriage. The couple had three sons: William, born in 1806; Robert, born in 1810; and Joseph, born in 1812.[5] In 1819 the family moved north to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, where the boys attended the Pennsylvania Abolitionist Society's Clarkson School. William intended to consolidate his business affairs and return with his family to Britain, where he thought his sons would have better opportunities. He died in 1826 before they could move.[citation needed]

William Purvis had intended his sons to be educated as gentlemen, and Robert and Joseph Purvis likely attended Amherst Academy, a secondary school in Amherst, Massachusetts. There is no evidence that either Robert or Joseph Purvis attended Amherst College, a common misconception.[6] (Amherst College catalogs from the 1820s do not list them as enrolled.) The brothers returned to Philadelphia, where their family was among the black elite. After their father died, Purvis and his two brothers were to share an estate worth $250,000. In 1828 the oldest brother William died of tuberculosis. Robert and Joseph inherited increased shares of the estate; they used their wealth to support their political activism and public service.[7]

Marriage and family

 
Harriet Forten Purvis (1810-1875), taken about 1874

In 1832, Purvis married Harriet Davy Forten, a woman of color and the daughter of wealthy sailmaker James Forten and his wife Charlotte, both prominent abolitionists and leaders in Philadelphia. Like her parents and siblings, Harriet Forten Purvis was active in anti-slavery groups in the city, including the interracial Philadelphia Female Anti-Slavery Society.[8]

The Purvises had eight children, including son Charles Burleigh Purvis (1841-1926). He became a surgeon and professor for 30 years in the medical school at Howard University. In addition, the couple raised Harriet's niece, Charlotte Forten Grimké, after her mother died. In her later life, Harriet Forten Purvis lectured publicly against segregation and for expanded suffrage for all citizens.[8]

After Harriet died, Purvis married Tacie Townsend, who was of European descent.[3] She was from Byberry Township (now Northeast Philadelphia), where Purvis had moved after the 3-day riots threatened his safety. As a public figure, he was criticized for this marriage by both whites and blacks who cared about the color line.[citation needed]

Political life

In 1833, Purvis helped abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison establish the American Anti-Slavery Society in Philadelphia and signed its "Declaration of Sentiments". Living for nearly the rest of the 19th century, Purvis was the last surviving member of the society.[1] That same year, he helped establish the Library Company of Colored People, modeled after the Library Company of Philadelphia, a subscription organization. With Garrison's support, in 1834, Purvis traveled to Britain to meet leading abolitionists.[9]

In 1838, he drafted the "Appeal of Forty Thousand Citizens Threatened with Disfranchisement",[10] which urged the repeal of a new state constitutional amendment disfranchising free African Americans. There were widespread tensions and fears among whites following Nat Turner's slave rebellion of 1831 in Virginia. Although Pennsylvania was a free state that had abolished slavery, state legislators persisted in passing this amendment to restrict free blacks' political rights. Free men of color in Pennsylvania did not regain suffrage until after the ratification of the Fifteenth Amendment in 1870, following the Civil War.[citation needed]

From 1845 to 1850, Purvis served as president of the Pennsylvania Anti-Slavery Society, a biracial organization. As a supporter of the Underground Railroad, Purvis served as chairman of the General Vigilance Committee from 1852 to 1857, which gave direct aid to fugitive slaves. According to his records, Purvis estimated that from 1831 to 1861, he helped one slave per day achieve freedom, aiding a total of more than 9,000 slaves to escape to the North. He used his own house, then located outside the city, in Byberry Township, as a station on the Underground Railroad.[1] Purvis built Byberry Hall on the edge of the Quaker-owned, Byberry Friends Meeting campus. Byberry Hall, which still stands today, hosted anti-slavery speakers and was across the street from Purvis's home.[11] Among the enslaved Africans he assisted was Thomas J. Dorsey, who became one of three of the top caterers in Philadelphia in the 18th century. Purvis was a friend of both Thomas and his son William Henry Dorsey, who was an artist and collector of Black history. William compiled hundreds of scrapbooks of Black history during the 18th century and built a collection that he laid out in his home in Philadelphia.

Purvis supported many progressive causes in addition to abolition. With Lucretia Mott, he supported women's rights and suffrage. He was a member of the American Equal Rights Association while Mott was president. Purvis also attended the founding meeting of the Pennsylvania Woman Suffrage Association.[1]

He supported temperance and similar social issues. He believed in integrated groups working for greater progress for all. By the end of the Civil War, which gained the emancipation of slaves and suffrage for black men, Purvis had reached his late 50s and became less active in political affairs.[citation needed]

Lombard Street riot

Irish Catholics, often competitors for the lowest-paying, unskilled and menial jobs, perceived successful African-American residents in the city as flaunting their success. Immigrants expressed their frustrations and jealousy in various attacks on blacks.[12][13]

A three-day race riot began on August 1, 1842. The mostly Irish rioters set fires and attacked firefighters and police as they went, heading for Purvis's home, where they protested outside for forty hours. Purvis and his home were reportedly saved from the Irish mob solely by a Catholic priest's intervention.[14]

Death and legacy

Neither of Purvis's elder sons survived the American Civil War. Both William P. Purvis (1832–1857) and Robert Purvis (1834–1862) were buried in the Byberry burial ground in northeast Philadelphia, now adjacent to Benjamin Rush State Park and a warehouse of the U.S. National Archives.[15] When the burial ground of St. Thomas African Episcopal Church was closed, where his mother had been buried in central Philadelphia, Purvis had her remains transferred to Fair Hill Burial Ground in Philadelphia's Fairhill neighborhood. His wife (1810-1875) and daughter Georgianna (1848-1877) who had died of consumption were buried here, as he was in 1898.[16][17]

His abolitionist efforts are memorialized by the state of Pennsylvania[18] and by the National Park Service.[19]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f "ROBERT PURVIS DEAD.; Anti-Slavery Leader Expires in Philadelphia, Aged 87 -- His Work for the Black Race" (PDF). The New York Times. April 16, 1898. Retrieved April 26, 2014.
  2. ^ Margaret Hope Bacon, But One Race: The Life of Robert Purvis, Albany: State University of New York, 2007, pp.7-8
  3. ^ a b Bankard, Bob (March 3, 2008). . Archived from the original on July 5, 2008. Retrieved May 3, 2008.
  4. ^ Bacon (2007), But One Race, pp. 7-9
  5. ^ a b Bacon (2007), But One Race, p. 11
  6. ^ Bacon (2007), But One Race, p. 22
  7. ^ Bacon (2007), But One Race, pp. 21-23
  8. ^ a b "Africans in America/Part 3/The Forten Women". Pbs.org. Retrieved March 3, 2017.
  9. ^ Bacon (2007), But One Race, pp. 43-46
  10. ^ Purvis, Robert (1833). DECLARATION OF SENTIMENTS OF THE AMERICAN ANTI-SLAVERY CONVENTION. Philadelphia: R.F Walcutt. pp. 69–70.
  11. ^ Bacon (2007), But One Race, p. 106
  12. ^ Runcie, John. Pennsylvania History (April 1972), Penn State University Press. "'Hunting the Nigs' in Philadelphia: The Race Riot of August 1834". 39.2, pp 187–218.
  13. ^ Hopper, Matthew S., Preservation Alliance for Greater Philadelphia, "From Refuge to Strength: The Rise of the African American Church in Philadelphia, 1787-1949", Preservationalliance.com; accessed December 30, 2012.
  14. ^ Historical Society of Pennsylvania, "Lombard Street Riots", Philaplace.org; accessed August 15, 2012.
  15. ^ "NOMINATION OF HISTORIC BUILDING, STRUCTURE, SITE, OR OBJECT : PHILADELPHIA REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES" (PDF). Phila.gov. Retrieved March 3, 2017.
  16. ^ But One Race
  17. ^ "Robert Purvis". Historic Fair Hill. June 20, 2014. Retrieved March 3, 2017.
  18. ^ "Stories from PA History". ExplorePAHistory.com. Retrieved March 3, 2017.
  19. ^ "Robert Purvis (U.S. National Park Service)". Nps.gov. June 17, 2015. Retrieved March 3, 2017.

External links

robert, purvis, british, member, parliament, politician, august, 1810, april, 1898, american, abolitionist, united, states, born, charleston, south, carolina, likely, educated, amherst, academy, secondary, school, amherst, massachusetts, spent, most, life, phi. For the British Member of Parliament see Robert Purvis politician Robert Purvis August 4 1810 April 15 1898 was an American abolitionist in the United States He was born in Charleston South Carolina and was likely educated at Amherst Academy a secondary school in Amherst Massachusetts He spent most of his life in Philadelphia Pennsylvania In 1833 he helped found the American Anti Slavery Society and the Library Company of Colored People From 1845 to 1850 he served as president of the Pennsylvania Anti Slavery Society and also traveled to Britain to gain support for the movement Robert PurvisPurvis c 1840 1849Born 1810 08 04 August 4 1810Charleston South CarolinaDiedApril 15 1898 1898 04 15 aged 87 Philadelphia Pennsylvania 1 NationalityAmericanKnown forAbolitionist Underground RailroadSpouse s Harriet Forten PurvisTracy TownsendChildren8 including Harriet Purvis Jr Charles Burleigh PurvisSignatureOf mixed race Purvis and his brothers were three quarters European by ancestry and inherited considerable wealth from their native British father after his death in 1826 Purvis s parents had lived in a common law marriage prevented from marrying because his mother was a free woman of color of Moroccan and Jewish descent The sons chose to identify with the black community and used their education and wealth to support abolition of slavery and anti slavery activities as well as projects in education to help the advance of African Americans Contents 1 Early life 2 Marriage and family 3 Political life 4 Lombard Street riot 5 Death and legacy 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksEarly life EditPurvis was born in 1810 in Charleston South Carolina His maternal grandparents were Dido Badaraka a former enslaved woman and Baron Judah a Jewish American native of Charleston His mother Harriet Judah was born a free woman of color Purvis s father was a immigrant from Great Britain As an adult Purvis told a reporter about his family His maternal grandmother Badaraka was kidnapped at age 12 from Morocco transported to South Carolina on a slave ship and sold as a slave in Charleston He described her as a full blooded Moor dark skinned with tightly curled hair She was freed at age 19 by her master s will 2 3 Harriet s father was Baron Judah born in Charleston of German Jewish and Spanish Portuguese Jewish descent 1 Baron was the third of ten children born to Hillel Judah a German Jewish immigrant and Charleston native Abigail Seixas his Spanish Portuguese Jewish wife Purvis told the reporter that his grandparents Badaraka and Judah had married This claim has been questioned by 21st century biographers given the social prominence of the Judah family in Charleston Judah s parents owned slaves In any case Badaraka and Judah had a relationship for several years and had two children together Harriet and her brother In 1790 Judah broke off his relationship with Badaraka when he moved with his parents from Charleston to Savannah Georgia In 1791 he moved to Richmond Virginia There he married a Jewish white woman and had four children with her 4 William Purvis was from Northumberland His father died while he was a child and his mother moved to Edinburgh for her sons education He immigrated to the United States as a young man with some of his brothers to make their fortunes William became a wealthy cotton salesman in Charleston and was a naturalized United States citizen 1 5 William Purvis and Harriet Judah lived together as husband and wife but racial law prevented their marriage The couple had three sons William born in 1806 Robert born in 1810 and Joseph born in 1812 5 In 1819 the family moved north to Philadelphia Pennsylvania where the boys attended the Pennsylvania Abolitionist Society s Clarkson School William intended to consolidate his business affairs and return with his family to Britain where he thought his sons would have better opportunities He died in 1826 before they could move citation needed William Purvis had intended his sons to be educated as gentlemen and Robert and Joseph Purvis likely attended Amherst Academy a secondary school in Amherst Massachusetts There is no evidence that either Robert or Joseph Purvis attended Amherst College a common misconception 6 Amherst College catalogs from the 1820s do not list them as enrolled The brothers returned to Philadelphia where their family was among the black elite After their father died Purvis and his two brothers were to share an estate worth 250 000 In 1828 the oldest brother William died of tuberculosis Robert and Joseph inherited increased shares of the estate they used their wealth to support their political activism and public service 7 Marriage and family Edit Harriet Forten Purvis 1810 1875 taken about 1874 In 1832 Purvis married Harriet Davy Forten a woman of color and the daughter of wealthy sailmaker James Forten and his wife Charlotte both prominent abolitionists and leaders in Philadelphia Like her parents and siblings Harriet Forten Purvis was active in anti slavery groups in the city including the interracial Philadelphia Female Anti Slavery Society 8 The Purvises had eight children including son Charles Burleigh Purvis 1841 1926 He became a surgeon and professor for 30 years in the medical school at Howard University In addition the couple raised Harriet s niece Charlotte Forten Grimke after her mother died In her later life Harriet Forten Purvis lectured publicly against segregation and for expanded suffrage for all citizens 8 After Harriet died Purvis married Tacie Townsend who was of European descent 3 She was from Byberry Township now Northeast Philadelphia where Purvis had moved after the 3 day riots threatened his safety As a public figure he was criticized for this marriage by both whites and blacks who cared about the color line citation needed Political life EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Robert Purvis news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message In 1833 Purvis helped abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison establish the American Anti Slavery Society in Philadelphia and signed its Declaration of Sentiments Living for nearly the rest of the 19th century Purvis was the last surviving member of the society 1 That same year he helped establish the Library Company of Colored People modeled after the Library Company of Philadelphia a subscription organization With Garrison s support in 1834 Purvis traveled to Britain to meet leading abolitionists 9 In 1838 he drafted the Appeal of Forty Thousand Citizens Threatened with Disfranchisement 10 which urged the repeal of a new state constitutional amendment disfranchising free African Americans There were widespread tensions and fears among whites following Nat Turner s slave rebellion of 1831 in Virginia Although Pennsylvania was a free state that had abolished slavery state legislators persisted in passing this amendment to restrict free blacks political rights Free men of color in Pennsylvania did not regain suffrage until after the ratification of the Fifteenth Amendment in 1870 following the Civil War citation needed From 1845 to 1850 Purvis served as president of the Pennsylvania Anti Slavery Society a biracial organization As a supporter of the Underground Railroad Purvis served as chairman of the General Vigilance Committee from 1852 to 1857 which gave direct aid to fugitive slaves According to his records Purvis estimated that from 1831 to 1861 he helped one slave per day achieve freedom aiding a total of more than 9 000 slaves to escape to the North He used his own house then located outside the city in Byberry Township as a station on the Underground Railroad 1 Purvis built Byberry Hall on the edge of the Quaker owned Byberry Friends Meeting campus Byberry Hall which still stands today hosted anti slavery speakers and was across the street from Purvis s home 11 Among the enslaved Africans he assisted was Thomas J Dorsey who became one of three of the top caterers in Philadelphia in the 18th century Purvis was a friend of both Thomas and his son William Henry Dorsey who was an artist and collector of Black history William compiled hundreds of scrapbooks of Black history during the 18th century and built a collection that he laid out in his home in Philadelphia Purvis supported many progressive causes in addition to abolition With Lucretia Mott he supported women s rights and suffrage He was a member of the American Equal Rights Association while Mott was president Purvis also attended the founding meeting of the Pennsylvania Woman Suffrage Association 1 He supported temperance and similar social issues He believed in integrated groups working for greater progress for all By the end of the Civil War which gained the emancipation of slaves and suffrage for black men Purvis had reached his late 50s and became less active in political affairs citation needed Lombard Street riot EditMain article Lombard Street riot Irish Catholics often competitors for the lowest paying unskilled and menial jobs perceived successful African American residents in the city as flaunting their success Immigrants expressed their frustrations and jealousy in various attacks on blacks 12 13 A three day race riot began on August 1 1842 The mostly Irish rioters set fires and attacked firefighters and police as they went heading for Purvis s home where they protested outside for forty hours Purvis and his home were reportedly saved from the Irish mob solely by a Catholic priest s intervention 14 Death and legacy EditNeither of Purvis s elder sons survived the American Civil War Both William P Purvis 1832 1857 and Robert Purvis 1834 1862 were buried in the Byberry burial ground in northeast Philadelphia now adjacent to Benjamin Rush State Park and a warehouse of the U S National Archives 15 When the burial ground of St Thomas African Episcopal Church was closed where his mother had been buried in central Philadelphia Purvis had her remains transferred to Fair Hill Burial Ground in Philadelphia s Fairhill neighborhood His wife 1810 1875 and daughter Georgianna 1848 1877 who had died of consumption were buried here as he was in 1898 16 17 His abolitionist efforts are memorialized by the state of Pennsylvania 18 and by the National Park Service 19 See also EditList of African American abolitionists Vigilant Association of PhiladelphiaReferences Edit a b c d e f ROBERT PURVIS DEAD Anti Slavery Leader Expires in Philadelphia Aged 87 His Work for the Black Race PDF The New York Times April 16 1898 Retrieved April 26 2014 Margaret Hope Bacon But One Race The Life of Robert Purvis Albany State University of New York 2007 pp 7 8 a b Bankard Bob March 3 2008 The Passage to Freedom The Underground Railroad Archived from the original on July 5 2008 Retrieved May 3 2008 Bacon 2007 But One Race pp 7 9 a b Bacon 2007 But One Race p 11 Bacon 2007 But One Race p 22 Bacon 2007 But One Race pp 21 23 a b Africans in America Part 3 The Forten Women Pbs org Retrieved March 3 2017 Bacon 2007 But One Race pp 43 46 Purvis Robert 1833 DECLARATION OF SENTIMENTS OF THE AMERICAN ANTI SLAVERY CONVENTION Philadelphia R F Walcutt pp 69 70 Bacon 2007 But One Race p 106 Runcie John Pennsylvania History April 1972 Penn State University Press Hunting the Nigs in Philadelphia The Race Riot of August 1834 39 2 pp 187 218 Hopper Matthew S Preservation Alliance for Greater Philadelphia From Refuge to Strength The Rise of the African American Church in Philadelphia 1787 1949 Preservationalliance com accessed December 30 2012 Historical Society of Pennsylvania Lombard Street Riots Philaplace org accessed August 15 2012 NOMINATION OF HISTORIC BUILDING STRUCTURE SITE OR OBJECT PHILADELPHIA REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES PDF Phila gov Retrieved March 3 2017 But One Race Robert Purvis Historic Fair Hill June 20 2014 Retrieved March 3 2017 Stories from PA History ExplorePAHistory com Retrieved March 3 2017 Robert Purvis U S National Park Service Nps gov June 17 2015 Retrieved March 3 2017 External links Edit Biography portalWorks by or about Robert Purvis at Internet Archive Robert Purvis at Find a Grave Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Robert Purvis amp oldid 1134545302, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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