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William Monroe Trotter

 
Gale Encyclopedia of Biography:

William Monroe Trotter

William Monroe Trotter (1872-1934), African American newspaper editor and protest leader, was the first prominent challenger of the accommodationist leadership of Booker T. Washington.

William Monroe Trotter was born on April 7, 1872, in Springfield Township, Ohio. His father, James, the son of a Mississippi slave-owner, rose from private to second lieutenant in the all-Black Massachusetts 55th Regiment during the Civil War. His mother, Virginia Issacs, claimed descent from Thomas Jefferson.

James Trotter settled in Massachusetts soon after the war, but after his first two children died in infancy the family decided to give birth to their third child in rural Ohio. At seven months young William and his parents moved back to Boston where they settled on the South End, far from the predominately African American West Side. The family later moved to suburban Hyde Park, a white neighborhood.

The elder Trotter instilled independence and racial pride in his children. James Trotter had been among the most outspoken supporters of the principle of equal pay for African American troops during the Civil War and was an outspoken critic of American racial injustice. He was also a leader among a small coterie of African American Democrats at a time when the vast majority of African Americans were Republican, and President Cleveland appointed him recorder of deeds for the District of Columbia, the highest political office accorded African Americans.

Despite the comfortable existence that federal service provided the Trotters, young William was admonished to excel as a way of breaking down racial barriers, and his father told him that if he were beaten in a fight with one of his white friends, he could expect another when he returned home. His childhood, however, seems remarkably free of racial incidents, and he was valedictorian and president of his high school class.

Trotter graduated magna cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa from Harvard University in 1895 and took an M.A. a year later. He had hoped to go into international banking, but even his impressive credentials opened few doors. Thwarted by race, Trotter settled on a career in real estate. In 1899 he married Geraldine Louise Pindell, whose uncle had led the fight to integrate Boston schools in the 1850s.

Trotter had participated in ceremonies and discussion groups commemorating various aspects of African American history in Boston, but it quickly became clear that he had an affinity for protest and agitation. He "did not seek a career of agitation, " he later remarked (writing in the third person), the "burden was dropped upon him by the desertion of others and he would not desert duty." In 1901, with an official of the West End branch of the Boston Public Library named George Forbes as his partner, Trotter founded the Boston Guardian on the same floor of the same building that had housed William Lloyd Garrison's Liberator.

The symbolism was unmistakable. Trotter and Forbes clearly saw themselves as the new abolitionists, direct legatees of those who battled for African American rights in the pre-Civil War era. Their principal target was Booker T. Washington, who "literally shriveled" before it. Guardian cartoons lampooned Washington as an errand boy for Northern philanthropists and its pages were filled with anti-BTW editorials and letters. "Let our spiritual advisors, " Trotter wrote, "condemn this idea of reducing a people to serfdom to make them good."

In 1903 when Washington went to Boston to give an address, Trotter and his allies heckled the Southern educator and prevented him from speaking. Several anti-Bookerites were subsequently arrested, and Trotter served 30 days in the Charles Street jail. But it was a Pyrrhic victory for BTW. Trotter's sentence aroused sympathy among other African American newspaper editors and awakened public awareness to the fact that there were those opposed to Washington's conciliatory public policy.

But it was W.E. B. DuBois, not Trotter, who emerged as Washington's most prominent critic. Trotter and DuBois were contemporaries at Harvard and briefly worked together as leaders of the Niagara Movement, a group of African American intellectuals critical of Booker T. Washington. But Trotter withdrew to form the National Equal Rights League and later refused to join the newly-formed National Association for the Advancement of Colored People because of his distrust of white leadership. His abrasive style did not endear him to other African American leaders, and his singlemindedness and inability to compromise was labelled fanaticism by his critics.

In 1912 Trotter endorsed Democrat Woodrow Wilson for the presidency, but the new president repaid his African American support by segregating African American workers in the federal government. Trotter led a delegation of African Americans to the White House and for 45 minutes he and Wilson stood toe to toe and debated the president's action. Wilson lost his temper, offended by Trotter's "manner" and "tone, with its background of passion, " and banned Trotter from the White House for the rest of his term.

During World War I, when a delegation of African Americans sought to attend the Versailles conference to protest the treatment of African Americans, Wilson denied them visas. Trotter circumvented the ban by securing passage to France as a ship's cook and jumping ship once it arrived in Europe.

In 1922, 1923, 1924, and 1926 Trotter led delegations of African Americans to the White House to protest continued segregation in the federal government. He also led demonstrations and pickets against the racist Birth of a Nation, defended the Scottsboro Boys, and crusaded for a Crispus Attucks day to honor the African American hero of the Revolutionary War. But his influence clearly declined during the 1920s, and in the last years of his life he felt ignored and unappreciated. In 1934, on the night of his 62nd birthday, he fell or jumped to his death from the roof of his home.

Trotter was largely overshadowed by his more illustrious contemporaries, W. E. B. DuBois and Booker T. Washington. Unable or unwilling to compromise, Trotter tended to personalize differences, and he lacked a coherent program and the organizational skills to launch a successful political movement. But he was the first African American leader to employ the tactics of direct action and group confrontation to achieve racial ends and an authentic pioneer of the 20th-century African American protest tradition.

Further Reading

The only major biography of William Monroe Trotter to date is The Guardian of Boston (1971) by Stephen B. Fox. Lerone Bennett devotes a chapter to Trotter in Pioneers in Protest (1968), and a brief biographical sketch may be found in the Dictionary of American Negro Biography (1983), edited by Rayford Logan and Michael Winston.

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William Monroe Trotter

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William Monroe Trotter

William Monroe Trotter (April 7, 1872 - April 7, 1934) was a newspaper editor and real estate business man, and an activist for African-American civil rights. He earned his undergraduate and graduate degrees at Harvard University, and was the first man of color to earn a Phi Beta Kappa key. Together with George Forbes, in 1901 he founded the Boston Guardian, an independent newspaper of the African-American community. In 1905, Trotter was a charter member of the Niagara Movement, helped found the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People with W.E.B. Du Bois, and independently founded the National Equal Rights League.

Contents

Early life and education

William was the third child born to James Monroe Trotter and Virginia Isaacs Trotter in Chillicothe, Ohio. His father James, son of an enslaved woman in Mississippi and her white master, served honorably with the 55th Regiment of the Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry Colored during the American Civil War. His mother Virginia Isaacs, also of mixed race, according to family tradition was a great-granddaughter of Thomas Jefferson and Mary Hemings, an older half-sister of Sally Hemings. Descendants of Betsy Hemmings have said that she was the daughter of Jefferson and Mary Hemings, born after he became a widower.[1][2]) Virginia grew up in Chillicothe, Ohio, which had a large free black community before the Civil War. This was where she met and married James Trotter.

Shortly after the war, the Trotters moved from Ohio to settle in Massachusetts. As their first two children died in infancy, they returned to rural Ohio and Virginia's parents for the birth of their third child. When William was seven months old, the young family moved back to Boston, where they settled on the South End. It was far from the predominately African-American West Side of Beacon Hill. The family later moved to suburban Hyde Park, a white neighborhood.

The father James Trotter was a man who broke through most racial obstacles placed before him. During the Civil War, he achieved the rank of 2nd Lieutenant. He was later appointed Recorder of Deeds for the District of Columbia by President Grover Cleveland, a role filled by two other prominent men of color of that era, Fredrick Douglass (1881–1886) and Senator Blanche Kelso Bruce (1891–1893). He instilled similar values in his son William, who graduated as valedictorian and was elected president of his high school class.

William Trotter went on to Harvard University to pursue a career in international banking, graduating magna cum laude in 1895, and becoming the first man of color to be awarded a Phi Beta Kappa key. He earned his Masters from Harvard in 1896.

Marriage and family

On June 27, 1899, Trotter married Geraldine Louise Pindell (October 3, 1872 - October 8, 1918).

Career

Despite his academic achievements, Trotter hit a racial glass ceiling and was frustrated in his efforts to excel in banking. He finally settled on a career in real estate. A few years later, he and a friend started a newspaper, and he served as the managing editor.

In 1901, along with Amherst graduate George Forbes, Trotter co-founded the Boston Guardian, setting up shop in the same building that had once housed William Lloyd Garrison’s Liberator. The Guardian frequently published editorials and letters opposing the conservative accommodationist policies of Booker T. Washington, the well-known founder of Tuskegee Institute. He set up the "Boston Literary and Historical Association," which became a forum for militant political thinkers such as Du Bois and Oswald Garrison Villard.

Along with W. E. B. Du Bois, Trotter was a charter member of the Niagara Movement in 1905, an organization of African Americans who renounced the ideas set forth in Booker T. Washington’s "Atlanta Compromise" speech of 1895. Trotter and Du Bois founded the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People in 1909. Trotter left because he did not think that whites should participate as officers of the NAACP. He founded the National Equal Rights League.

Through the Guardian, Trotter mounted a campaign against Thomas Dixon's play The Clansman (1905), including encouraging a protest against it. The play closed. In 1915, when the film adapted from it, Birth of a Nation opened in Boston, Trotter led pickets to demonstrate against the racist film, and the theater ended its run.

In 1912 Trotter helped support Woodrow Wilson for president, who disappointed his supporters by allowing the re-segregation of workspaces in several federal agencies. As a political activist, Trotter led several protests against segregation in the federal government. Trotter and a group of African Americans went to the White House to protest President Wilson’s actions. Offended by Trotter’s manner and tone during their meeting, Wilson banned him from the White House for the remainder of his term in office.

Wilson put obstacles in the way of Trotter and other African Americans who wanted to attend the Paris Peace Conference in 1919 to protest treatment of African Americans in the US, by refusing to issue passports to them. Trotter obtained work as a waiter on the SS Yarmouth to gain passage overseas. While in Paris, Trotter attended the First Pan African Congress.

In the pages of The Guardian, Trotter descried the plight of the Scottsboro boys, nine African-American teenagers accused in 1931 of raping two white woman in Alabama. In their first trial, they were convicted and sentenced to death. They had three trials and were eventually defended by Samuel Liebowitz. Since most blacks had been disfranchised in the former Confederate states since the early 20th century, they could not vote or sit on juries. The case ultimately went to the US Supreme Court as Powell v. Alabama.

On the night of April 7, 1934, William Monroe Trotter fell to his death at his home in Boston. The cause of death was given as “Unspecified”. It was his 62nd birthday.

Legacy and honors

  • In 2002, scholar Molefi Kete Asante listed William Monroe Trotter on his list of 100 Greatest African Americans.[3]
  • The William Monroe Trotter Elementary School, a K-5 school named for him, is in Dorchester, Massachusetts, not far from where Trotter lived during his adult life.
  • The William Monroe Trotter Institute at the University of Massachusetts Boston is named for him. The research institute focuses on the study of black history and black culture.
  • The William Monroe Trotter Multicultural Center (aka Trotter House) at the University of Michigan is named for him.

Influence

W.E.B. Du Bois attests to the influence which Trotter wielded in opposition to Booker T. Washington’s conservative social philosophy:

This opposition began to become vocal in 1901 when two men, Monroe Trotter, Harvard 1895, and George Forbes, Amherst 1895, began the publication of the Boston Guardian. The Guardian was bitter, satirical, and personal; but it was earnest, and it published facts. It attracted wide attention among colored people; it circulated among them all over the country; it was quoted and discussed. I did not wholly agree with the Guardian, and indeed only a few Negroes did, but nearly all read it and were influenced by it.”
—W.E.B. Du Bois[4]

References

  1. ^ Laura B. Randolph, "THE THOMAS JEFFERSON/SALLY HEMINGS CONTROVERSY: Did Jefferson Also Father Children By Sally Hemings' Sister?", Ebony, February 1999, accessed 16 February 2011
  2. ^ Edna Bolling Jacques, "The Hemmings Family in Buckingham County, Virginia", 2002, Official Website, accessed 13 February 2011
  3. ^ Asante, Molefi Kete (2002). 100 Greatest African Americans: A Biographical Encyclopedia, Amherst, New York. Prometheus Books. ISBN 1-57392-963-8.
  4. ^ Dusk of Dawn: An Essay Toward an Autobiography of a Race Concept, New York, 1940, pp. 72-73 - ISBN 0878559175
  • Lewis, David Levering, W.E.B. Du Bois Biography Of A Race, Owl Books, 1994
  • Yenser, Thomas (editor), Who's Who in Colored America: A Biographical Dictionary of Notable Living Persons of African Descent in America, Who's Who in Colored America, Brooklyn, New York, 1930-1931-1932 (Third Edition)
  • Harrison, William, Phylon (1940–1956), Vol. 7, No. 3 (3rd Qtr. 1946), pp. 236–245; published by Clark Atlanta University
  • Phylon Profile IX: William Monroe Trotter-Fighter, ISSN: 08856818

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