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A
Quaker Firebrand Swings An Election
by
Joseph Duffy
This
entry is courtesy of Hog
River Journal , where it originally appeared in the Aug/Sep/Oct
2004 issue.
At 7:30 p.m. on March 24, 1863 a young, diminutive
woman from Pennsylvania, wearing a plain black silk dress, mounted
the platform at Hartford's stately Touro Hall and took righteous
aim at the Democrats with her rich mezzo-soprano voice. She cut
a striking figure with her short dark curls, her animated face,
and a finely chiseled jaw. Minutes into the address, her crafted
sentences grabbed listeners' imaginations as she described the plight
of the nation and the valor of Union soldiers. By the end of the
evening she was the toast of the town.
Anna Elizabeth Dickinson visited Connecticut
for 12 blustery days in March and April 1863. Barely 20, she had
been invited to the state by the Republicans to participate in a
hotly contested election for governor. It had never been done in
the Yankee “Land of Steady Habits”—a woman summoned to the stump!
Anna was well suited for the task. She had always broken rules she
thought shackled the human spirit. Here was a chance to strike a
blow against slavery, the evil she'd long despised, and quite possibly
influence the gubernatorial race.
The ballot-box battle into which Dickinson was drawn
pitted incumbent Republican William Buckingham against Mexican War
hero and Democrat Thomas H. Seymour. Buckingham was steadfast in
his support of Lincoln and the war to end slavery at any cost. But
Republicans' fears that war weariness might aid the Democrats at
the polls prompted their hiring of a woman to invigorate the campaign.
From early childhood in her native Philadelphia,
Dickinson ached to do great deeds like her father, John. The Dickinson
home was a station on the Underground Railroad. In a sense John
Dickinson was, himself, a martyr to the cause of abolition: he died
of a heart attack after delivering an antislavery speech when Anna
was two years old. In her youth Anna scrubbed coal grime from sidewalks
for dimes to attend lectures or buy books, which she read past midnight
by a coal oil lamp. A steady diet of the Bible, the classics, Shakespeare,
Lord Byron, and Thomas Carlyle's On Heroes, Hero-Worship, and
the Heroic in History bred in Anna a sense of destiny. Thus,
a father's mission was reignited in a daughter who never knew him.
In discussing her career Anna later declared, “I took the platform
because I had something to say… My head and heart, soul and brain,
were all on fire with the words I must speak!” To gird her ambition,
she embraced the motto—“The world belongs to those who take it!”
Still, she rode into Hartford's railroad station on
March 24, 1863 with a self-doubt that, despite her many recent speeches
that had roused New England audiences, robbed her of both appetite
and sleep. New Hampshire crowds had even braved snows and gales
to hear her at whistle-stops and halls bedecked with evergreen boughs.
Yet, she was always broke, without prospects, and ever anguished
about supporting her mother and four hapless siblings. Now she was
alone in Hartford, a city convulsed by wartime politics, where as
recounted in the Springfield Republican : “Rally meetings
are all the rage… and large gatherings are held every night”
Her first Hartford day was tiring. Impatiently, she
sat for photographs at the Main Street studio of the Wilson brothers.
Then her host, Republican state chairman and Travelers' Insurance
mogul James G. Batterson, accorded her a brusque interview. Filled
with misgiving, Batterson was swayed to hire Dickinson by New Hampshire
political sage Ben Prescott and a prominent Hartfordite, Mrs. John
Olmstead. Anna was piqued by the scant amount of newsprint that
heralded her arrival. Her name was slotted small, last, and off
to the side in the published roster of Republican speakers.
Hartford was home to Harriet Beecher Stowe and kindred
women of vision. They did not share the view of men like Rev. Horace
Bushnell that feminism was “the reform against nature.” But even
Stowe's spirited half-sister Isabella Beecher Hooker harbored doubts
about Dickinson. “I shall never forget the dismay at the announcement
of her first speech…lest harm should come to the political cause
from so much adverse criticism in our conservative and prejudiced
city,” she recalled.
Republican alarmists speculated that Buckingham
could lose by 10,000 votes. However much exaggerated the estimate,
war casualties continued to burn up telegraph lines and even cooler
heads like Charles Dudley Warner, editor of the Hartford Evening
Press, confided to his friend Joseph Hawley, organizer of
a Hartford volunteer regiment and future Connecticut governor and
U.S. senator, that the recent pro-Buckingham surge might have come
too late to matter. That was before he, Isabella Beecher Hooker,
and others heard Anna speak.
Anna often spoke extemporaneously; she could pace a
platform for two hours and use her wide gray eyes to flash out the
severity of the national crisis. She admonished her Hartford audience
that the war was an Armageddon to decide the fate of civilization,
self-government, and human progress itself. As she thundered on
for Buckingham's reelection, news of the dynamic speaker at Touro
Hall spread, and people raced over to get a look at her. “Packed
as we never saw,” reported Warner, as 1,500 piled into the hall,
drawn by what he deemed Anna's “irresistible appeal.” Stowe dubbed
Dickinson “a natural orator” and Warner had trouble taking notes
because Anna spoke at such typhoon speed. “Hartford for once has
been astonished,” read Warner's March 25th editorial. “If every
voter could hear her, there would be no doubt this woman is sent
as from on high to save the state.”
With a single speech, Dickinson won over a Hartford
following. Batterson dashed off a telegram to New Hampshire's Prescott:
“She has no equal in Connecticut. People wild with enthusiasm.”
Even Rev. Horace Bushnell agreed.
After hearing Anna, Isabella Hooker felt instantly
born to female activism. Dickinson lodged for the night at Hooker's
Nook Farm home on Forest Street. The two women stayed up until dawn
talking “as mother and daughter” about equal rights for women, especially
the vote. Though 20 years older than her guest, Hooker gave lasting
credit to Anna for her awakening: “from this grand soul born to
freedom denied all women, I learned to trust.” Calling Dickinson
“a new Joan of Arc,” Hooker celebrated the Touro Hall conquest as
“a stride, not a mere step to the final victory for the suppressed
rights of women.”
The next day at 3 p.m. at Hartford's Center
Church, Dickinson and Hooker got busy organizing the Women's Loyal
League. A monumental coming out for Hooker, she was to found the
Connecticut Woman Suffrage Association in 1869.
Anna's speech startled the Connecticut Democrats into
acknowledging her presence. The Hartford Times denounced
the fallen fortunes of the Republicans “who actually procure a ‘woman'
for aid.” The New Haven Register exulted, “nothing so
popularizes any cause as a petticoat.” Burlesquing Dickinson as
“a spirit medium,” The Times attacked her other heresies:
“She lectures in favor of women's rights… She is getting up ‘women's
leagues,' the principles of which would destroy… society.” Perhaps
delighted to be suddenly noticed, Dickinson sassed back, “I wish
for once the women of Hartford could vote. The editor of the Times
would be nowhere!”
At $100 per speech, Republicans hastily deployed their
militant Quaker to key towns. Isabella Hooker now sounded a trumpet
for Anna that resonated all the way to Washington D.C. To Secretary
of War Edwin M. Stanton, she wrote, “We have been electrified by
speeches from Miss Anna Dickinson—the same young lady instrumental
in securing the New Hampshire victory.” Hartford's Joseph Allyn
told Glastonbury native and Secretary of the Navy Gideon Welles
how “the little Quakeress is stirring up the popular heart!”
Everywhere she spoke was a reprise of her Touro Hall
triumph. Anna saved all the news clippings in a scrapbook: “Never
was such a large audience seen in New Britain at Center Church”;
at Meriden's town hall “Hundreds unable to get in at all”; “People
assembled by the hundreds far and near” at Manchester's Center Congregational
Church; “A solid mass of humanity 1500 strong” shoved their way
into Waterbury's Hotchkiss Hall. Thus, it went in Bristol and Norwalk
too.
Hecklers could not unnerve Dickinson. “You worked for
ten cents a day in Europe,” she told Waterbury immigrants. “That's
all we get now!” yelled two Irish laborers. “Then you must work
for a Democrat!” she retorted. They did! The crowd burst into laughter.
At Middletown's MacDonough Hall, she faced 2,000 people when pranksters
rang fire bells and turned down gas lights. Standing fast in eerie
dimness, she warned, “Yes, there is a fire!…We have kindled a fire
that will never go out till naught is left of their party save ashes!”
Dickinson's feats earned her the honor of delivering
the keynote address at a Republican rally on election eve. Though
a heavy cold kept her bedridden all day Saturday April 4, she exercised
iron will even before the big speech. Seats were in short supply
at Hartford's Allyn Hall. Three hundred women from outlying towns
showed up by special train, despite a party plea for ladies to “cheerfully”
stay home and save seats for voters! Dickinson demanded that the
women be seated down front and the rally's organizers quickly bowed
to her fiat.
From the Allyn Hall podium, she gazed out at a sea
of faces framed by the red, white, and blue bunting that adorned
the hall. “Whatever the west might do, however much the middle states
disgrace themselves,” she intoned, “you will still find New England
true to herself. This same New England will grind you to powder!”
She berated South Carolina's “degradation” while extolling “the
brain of New England.” Then came the fireball:
The
head of the people…requires the reason for war…. The heart of
the people questions for the cause of civil war…. The people…
with their Constitution—safeguard of liberty—they demand answer!
And what answer shall be given? Slavery! Slavery! Proven, we think
to be so…. If then slavery is the cause, the originator, the upholder
of the rebellion, sweep aside the cause. Strike down the originator.
Crush the upholder. Kill slavery!
Clapping and hurrahs shook the air, and the audience
begged Anna for more. From memory, she rendered Longfellow's 1849
verse,“Sail on, sail on, Oh Ship of State… Sail on, Oh Union strong
and great!” Applause was always a tonic for her.
The next day Governor William Buckingham was reelected
by a margin of 2,633 votes. It is true that a surge of rising support
for Buckingham predated Dickinson's heroics. Furloughed soldiers
and pro-war Democrats were also major factors in the Republican
win. But to thoughtful figures like Warner, Hooker, and Batterson,
Dickinson's energy had converted their electoral ripple into the
final wave of victory. In giddy jubilation, Batterson dashed off
a telegram to New York Republicans. ”(E)nlist the most eloquent
woman of the century in the largest hall you can command.” To a
crowd of 5,000 at Manhattan's Cooper Union Hall, Rev. Henry Ward
Beecher would shortly introduce her as “the redeemer of New England.”
Now launched as a luminous political “star” by her
Connecticut admirers, Dickinson delivered hundreds of speeches.
Before departing Hartford, she was saluted with a band concert,
paid $400, and given both a Colt revolver and a gold watch. With
Stowe and Hooker, she shared the noble dream that the Civil War
would banish the evil trinity of slavery, racism, and anti-feminism.
In 1868, Dickinson wrote What Answer, a compassionate
novel on interracial marriage. Hailed by Stowe, the book drew vile
criticism, made little money, and vanished from print. The pioneering
work was recently republished through the efforts of scholars at
Pennsylvania's Gettysburgh College. Dickinson's career as reformer
and agitator also faded after the war. She died on October 22, 1932
in Goshen, New York, where she had been living on charity. She was
six days shy of turning 90. Once lauded as wielding “the tongue
of a dozen women, the boldness of forty men,” she had fallen into
history's dustbin. It wasn't until a few years ago that Civil War
enthusiasts placed a memorial plaque on her grave in Goshen.
What judgment, then, will the future hold for Anna
E. Dickinson, who so early on craved “a great name and place in
the world” and mobilized language to make a difference during a
defining national passage? Revisiting her world is a good beginning.
Harriet Beecher Stowe lauded her as “a noble woman pleading the
cause of the poorest to the heart and conscience of the American
nation on the sin of caste.” In 1895, her friend Susan B. Anthony
called Anna “the pioneer female speaker who saved the nation in
time of peril.” But perhaps Isabella Beecher Hooker knew best Anna's
mystic oratorical chemistry. “She like many of us has seen the evil
and the remedy so long,” observed Hooker. “She considers her words
to be that of the outliner who brings out the startling features…
with a few bold touches that are never forgotten, or the poet who
stirs your feelings and starts thoughtfulness in the right direction.”
Joe
Duffy of Wethersfield has taught and counseled at Manchester's East
Catholic High School for 37 years. He is the author of Hartford's
Catholic Legacy.
This
article originally appeared in the Aug/Sep/Oct 2004 issue of HOG
RIVER JOURNAL. For more information, visit www.hogriver.org.
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