“No
refuge could save the hireling and slave
from the terror of flight or the gloom of the grave.
And the star-spangled banner in triumph doth wave
o’er the land of the free and the home of the brave.”
from the terror of flight or the gloom of the grave.
And the star-spangled banner in triumph doth wave
o’er the land of the free and the home of the brave.”
The Third Verse of
“The Star-Spangled Banner,”
the National Anthem of
the United States
I'm sure many of you know
the narrative about what we continue to call our “National Anthem.”
It is a story that is relegated to the back pages of history because
it is a part of our so-called heritage represented in a song we do
not truly understand. Crowds of Americans never sing but one verse of
the anthem – they fail to investigate the musical composition in
its entirety. Still, the racist roots of both the writer, the
lyrics, and the history of the anthem should be shared. Many consider the song
offensive in nature when they learn its history.
Some enslaved blacks in
the United States escaped and joined the British army to fight
America in the War of 1812 – they were called the Colonial Marines.
These slaves joined the British to get freedom.
The
slaves and people of color living along the Chesapeake, and in the
Tidewater regions of the mid-Atlantic states, were faced with several
choices during the War of 1812. They could either fight for the
United States, a nation that professed equality and freedom but
lacked delivery, watch from the sidelines, or take a chance to secure
freedom by joining the British forces.
Precedent for such action
was set during the American Revolution when Lord Dunmore, Royal
Governor of Virginia, issued his 1775 proclamation offering enslaved
persons freedom if they fought on the side of Great Britain. It is
estimated that between 800-2,000 served in what became known as
Dunmore’s Ethiopian Brigade, which saw limited combat during the
war. After the Revolution, many of these former slaves turned
soldiers of fortune and relocated to islands in the Caribbean or to
Canada.
By the time the War of
1812 erupted many northern states had abolished slavery. However,
such states granted few, if any, rights to citizens. In the South,
slavery remained a way of life and an economic pillar.
On April 2, 1814, a
proclamation issued by Sir Alexander Cochrane, Vice Admiral and
Commander in Chief of His Majesty’s Ships and Vessels in North
America stated that those who served in the King’s forces would be
liberated after the war. Cochrane had a thousand copies of his
proclamation printed and distributed to the enslaved population
residing in the Chesapeake Bay region. Cochrane hoped to “annoy
Americans, and bring the consequences of the war home to their own
doors.”
Francis Scott Key, the
lyricist of the National Anthem in August of 1814, witnessed the
Colonial Marines, as part of the British troops that attacked
Americans outside of D.C. and drove them back into the city, setting
the White House on fire.
So it was that in
September, Key also witnessed 25 hours of continuous British
bombardment of Fort McHenry in Baltimore. After seeing the fort
survive, Key became so moved that he wrote a poem called “The
Defence (sic) of Fort M’Henry” that became the national anthem.
In the third verse, Key
had a direct and special message for the enslaved people who had
dared to fight for their freedom – we will pursue you to get
revenge. His unmistakeable message to the blacks fighting for freedom
– we will hunt you down and the search will leave you in terror
because, when we find you, your next stop is the gloom of the grave.
Jamie Stiehm, Washington
columnist for Creators Syndicate, speaks of Key …
“Lawyer-poet Key,
born to massive slaveholding wealth in Maryland, was one of the
richest men in America. He liked it that way.
“As he grew older and
darker, Key sought to buttress slavery, known as our own 'peculiar
institution.' He did just that, past his last breath. The U.S.
Supreme Court, which he helped shape, stood strongly for slavery. So
beside the anthem, his political legacy as a critical political
player in upholding slavery is devastating.
“In his (18)50s, Key
became an adviser to President Andrew Jackson, who was also a wealthy
self-made Southern slaveholder.
“At the same time,
Key was named by Jackson as the U.S. district attorney for the
nation’s capital, where he prosecuted race and slavery laws to the
fullest extent, even to the death penalty. He also aggressively
prosecuted early abolitionists, who had founded the anti-slavery
movement in 1833 … Jackson’s presidency brought brutal, racially
motivated mob violence like never before, including a race riot in
Washington, D.C. Jackson had no sympathy for mobs, but even less for
slaves and free blacks.
“Then came the worst
cut of all: Key prevailed on Jackson to name Key’s own
brother-in-law, Roger Taney, to the Cabinet and then to the ultimate
prize: chief justice of the United States.”
(Jamie
Stiehm. “‘The Star-Spangled Banner’s’ racist lyrics reflect
its slave owner author, Francis Scott Key.” The Undefeated.
September 6, 2018.)
And, by the way, all of
Francis Scott Key's descendants sided with the Confederacy during the
Civil War. Key, himself, owned around 20 African-American slaves at
the time.
This is just a small
window into the reality of affirming that the heritage of America is
based on White supremacy in the original sin of slavery.
Elizabeth Martinez –
American Chicana feminist and a long-time community organizer,
activist, author, and educator – in her paper “What is White
Supremacy?” defines the term in this way:
“White Supremacy
is a historically based, institutionally perpetuated system of
exploitation and oppression of continents, nations, and peoples of
color by white peoples and nations of the European continent, for the
purpose of maintaining and defending a system of wealth, power, and
privilege.”
(Elizabeth
Martinez. “What is White Supremacy?” February
1998.)
Martinez cites three
stages of White supremacy in the U.S. The first stage was the European seizure of the lands inhabited by indigenous peoples. Next, the United States could not have developed economically as a nation without enslaved African labor – the second stage. And,
the third major piece in the true story of the formation of the United States as a nation was the take‐over of half of Mexico by war
– what we know as today's Southwest.
The Crossroads anti-racist
collective uses the following definition of internalized racist
superiority:
“A complex
multi-generational socialization process that teaches white people to
believe, accept and /or live out superior societal definitions of
self and to fit into and live out superior social roles. These
behaviors define and normalize the race construct and it outcome –
white supremacy.”
Why would we continue to
recognize Key's “Star-Spangled Banner” as the national anthem? I
cannot understand how the song has stood for so long. In deference to
the brutal cruelty of slavery, one would think the song should be
replaced.
The song bothered
abolitionists of the day. They, too, were irked by how easily the
deaths of enslaved Africans could be celebrated in the same stanza in
which this land was hailed as “the land of the free.”
Abolitionists even created other songs to the tune of “The
Star-Spangled Banner” that spoke of the true pain and costs of
slavery and how desperately freedom was desired. Change, if and when
it does occur, is usually a long time coming.
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