Historic Harlem on My Mind, Part 2 - Harlem’s Colored Orphan Asylum
New York City is an always changing landscape. Very
few things remained as they were; like fallen snowflakes, they linger for
awhile and in the warmth of the spring we cannot remember what they looked like
or exactly where they had fallen. Like people, institutions die and fade away
from our collective memories. Such a place was Harlem’s Colored Orphan Asylum
situated at 143rd and Amsterdam Avenue from 1867 to 1907. A few
blocks away, at 136th Street,was the Hebrew Orphan Asylum. The COA
was founded in 1836 by three remarkable Quaker women: Anna Shotwell, Mary
Murray and Hannah Shotwell Murray. Its first location was 6th Avenue
and 12th Street but there is
nothing there to tell you of its existence. A decade later it was situated at
Fifth Avenue between 43rd and 44th Streets.
Children of
colored-be they orphans, half-orphans (with a parent), neglected or, later,
delinquent- were cared for by these “angels of mercy.” The work of the women was aided by financial help
from New York’s elite families such as the children of Supreme Court Chief Justice John Jay, R. H.
Macy, John Jacob Astor, the grandparents and parents of Theodore Roosevelt,
James Lenox and others. Poor as they were, the black community contributed
meager funds, non-perishable goods, and free labor to keep the orphanage in
business. One of the nation’s famous abolitionist was connected to the
institution for twenty years as a resident physician. James McCune Smith, a
product of the African Free School, was educated in Scotland as American
prejudice drove him across the ocean. Smith was a radical abolitionist and one
who quickly dismiss racist theories of African inferiority. Smith’s death in
1865 was a double blow: It deprived the orphanage of a first rate physician and
it eliminated a liaison from the community to the institution.
The Colored Orphan Asylum cared for about 15,000
children from 1836 until its closing in 1946. Some were enslaved children
abandoned by fugitives en route to Canada. A few came from Africa and Cuba. The
far west sent some Native American children and some whites were admitted after
the passage of a 1944 anti-discrimination law in New York. Nine of the boys
served in the Civil War. One was James
Henry Gooding who was born into slavery but was brought to the institution as a
young child. He served in the Massachusetts 54th regiment that was
featured in the movie Glory.
Gooding’s fame came from writing President Lincoln informing the
commander-in-chief that men of color received less pay than their white
counterparts even though they had the same responsibilities and faced the same
dangerous. Eventually Congress provided funds to rectify the blatant racism.
Later, some were enlisted in the 369th Regiment better known as
Harlem Hell Fighters during World War 1. Nearly all the children were
indentured at age twelve with boys working in the fields and girls in homes.
Unfortunately, few were given assignments in New York City as the managers
considered cities to be sources of vices and lost virtues. This meant that
young, vulnerable and immature children were often sent hundreds of miles away
from their nurturing environment in the orphanage and away from siblings left
behind in the institution. Loneliness combined with immaturity caused some to
destroy property, maim animals and physically attack members of the host
family. In turn, despite background checks, some employers were cruel towards
their charges even after the enactment of laws preventing cruelty against children
(which came after laws preventing cruelty to animals).
The Colored Orphan Asylum overcame many obstacles
including financial distress, fires, wars and ultimately the destruction of
their building during the July 1863 Draft Riots as Irish mobs incensed over
being forced to fight to end slavery attacked African Americans and their
abolitionist supporters in a frenzy of violence that destroyed lives and
property. The mob drove out over two hundred children and stole all the
furnishings, bedding, utensils and anything they could carry before torching
the building. Homeless, the managers had to find temporary shelter for several
years until they bought land in Harlem. Their home at present day 143rd
and Amsterdam faced Broadway and remained the training ground for thousands of
young people until 1907. The recent
completion of the subway lines through Harlem raised the property value to a
level that selling the land made a profit for the orphanage. They moved to Riverdale
where they remained until 1946. By then, the institution was an orphanage
mainly in name as most of the children were neglected or delinquents sent by
the juvenile courts. Indenturing was no longer practice as it was replaced by
foster homes. By the 1940s, prominent African Americans such as Marian
Anderson, Joe Louis, Duke Ellington, Bill “Bojangles” Robinson, Roy Wilkins and
Audre Delany were associated with the institution.
Over the past 177 years the Colored Orphan Asylum
nurtured multitudes who served society as nurses, teachers, doctors, lawyers
and businessmen. Former resident and a retired police officer Fitz Harvey
described his stay during the early 1940s as a salvation that kept him out of
the streets and ultimately prison. After a series of mergers, the spirit of the
founding Quaker women is still alive in Harlem Dowling-West Side Center for
Children and Family Services, the successor to the Colored Orphan Asylum.
William Seraile, Ph.D
Source: William Seraile, Angels of Mercy:White Women
and the History of New York’s Colored Orphan Asylum.(Fordham University Press)
Labels: COA, Harlem, The Colored Orphan Asylum, william seraile
3 Comments:
wow...very very intense
This is so very fascinating, utterly enthralling. Thanks much for all your effort and research.
Know that it is appreciated!
I am very, very happy this got posted and I do hope many who subscribe to Harlem One Stop will read it.
Many thanks,
Carolyn Owerka
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