We mustn’t stop learning the lessons left by slavery

  • Eugene Robinson / Washington Post Columnist
  • Monday, February 26, 2007 9:00pm
  • Opinion

WASHINGTON – If you think about it, there should be nothing particularly surprising about the discovery that one of Strom Thurmond’s relatives once owned the Rev. Al Sharpton’s great-grandfather. That’s how slavery worked – human beings owning other human beings, buying them and selling them, often passing them down to the next generation like sentient family heirlooms. Haven’t we already hashed and rehashed that whole sad story?

Actually, no.

What makes the story that broke over the weekend so compelling is that we know the charismatic activist Sharpton and we knew the one-time segregationist Thurmond. The ancestors of such public figures can’t be dismissed as mere historical abstractions. They were real, flesh-and-blood men and women who played their roles, voluntarily or not, in the horrific institution that so indelibly stained this nation.

Because we know so little about slavery at the individual level, we really don’t know slavery at all.

“I almost fell off the chair,” Sharpton told me by phone Monday, describing the moment when a team of expert genealogists, working with the New York Daily News for a Black History Month project, met him at the studio where he does his radio talk show and told him of his link with Thurmond.

As Sharpton tells it, the researchers had just informed him that his great-grandfather, Coleman Sharpton Sr., once lived near Edgefield, S.C. Previously, he had never been able to trace that side of his family back further than the grocery store his grandfather, Coleman Sharpton Jr., had owned and run in Florida. Sharpton said he thought he knew where the genealogists were headed – Sharpton once was entertainer James Brown’s road manager, and Brown was from near Edgefield, so Sharpton thought he was about to be told that he and the late Godfather of Soul were related.

“I thought I had it all figured out while they were talking, and I was getting my reaction ready,” Sharpton recalled. When the researchers from the Web site Ancestry.com dropped the Thurmond bomb, the normally voluble Sharpton could only take stock in disbelief: “Strom Thurmond’s family owned my family,” he said, according to the Daily News.

Sharpton learned for the first time that his name came from Alexander Sharpton, a prosperous Edgefield County slave owner. Nothing unusual there – that’s the way we got our surnames, from our ancestors’ owners – but still a shock when a sweeping historical fact is made personal.

“Just now, I was going through the airport in Miami and a guy saw me and asked for an autograph, and I stopped to give it to him, and it hit me,” Sharpton said. “I was writing my name because my great-grandfather was owned by a Sharpton. Every time I look at my name, I’m looking at the contract that America provided for us.”

Alexander Sharpton’s son Jefferson married a woman named Julia Ann Thurmond, who turns out to have been Strom’s first cousin twice removed, according to the genealogists. When Jefferson died broke in 1860, patriarch Alexander transferred ownership of “Coleman, age 25 years, Biddy (female) age 22 years old, Harrison aged about 4 years and Bachus aged about 8 years” to Jefferson’s four children, along with “the future increase of the said female slave.”

The four slaves were then sent temporarily to the custody of another relative in Florida, where their labor was to be used to pay off Jefferson’s debts. The Civil War intervened, and after emancipation Coleman worked as a wood hauler. His son, Coleman Jr. – Sharpton’s grandfather – not only owned the grocery store in Liberty County, Fla., but also was a preacher, which Sharpton had not known.

I tell the Sharpton family story in some detail because the rest of us have similar family sagas, but few can trace them all the way back to a specific owner or plantation. The point is not to wallow in slavery, but to know it so that we can fully comprehend its lessons. For Sharpton, learning his family history was a reminder of unspeakable cruelty and monumental injustice – but also a personal challenge.

“I think of my grandfather, the son of a slave, the son of a man who was bought and sold in that horrific manner, and my grandfather opened up a grocery store and took care of his family and raised 17 children,” Sharpton said.

“That’s what his generation did. Now what are we going to do? Are we a generation that wants to be defined by nothing more than using the N-word and having all this gangster attitude? This information doesn’t just put the responsibility on society, it puts the responsibility on me. On us.”

Eugene Robinson is a Washington Post columnist. Contact him by writing to eugenerobinson@washpost.com.

Talk to us

> Give us your news tips.

> Send us a letter to the editor.

> More Herald contact information.

More in Opinion

Pedestrians using umbrellas, some Washingtonians use them, as they cross Colby Avenue under pouring rain on Tuesday, Nov. 28, 2017 in Everett, Wa. The forecast through Saturday is cloudy with rain through Saturday. (Andy Bronson / The Herald)
Editorial: Speed limit reductions a good start on safety

Everett is reducing speed limits for two streets; more should follow to save pedestrian lives.

September 3, 2025: Contagious Infections
Editorial cartoons for Thursday, Aug. 4

A sketchy look at the news of the day.… Continue reading

Thanks for coverage of local governments use of AI

I really enjoyed reading the recent article about the use of artificial… Continue reading

Everett School Board, Pos. 3: Clarke best for special ed needs

Respect Public Schools-Washington strongly supports Tom Clarke in the run for the… Continue reading

Herald reporters deserve fair wage, no quota

The demands of The Herald’s newsroom staff to ratify an employment contract… Continue reading

Stephens: Mass migration has been undoing of liberal democracy

By not seeking the consent of the governed on immigration, the West has invited the threat of populism.

Comment: America’s enemies thrilled by Trump’s war on expertise

An administration that favors fealty over experience is surrendering the nation’s security advantage.

Gov. Bob Ferguson and Rep. Rick Larsen talk during a listening session with with community leaders and families addressing the recent spending bill U.S. Congress enacted that cut Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program funding by 20% on Thursday, Aug. 21, 2025 in Lynnwood, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Editorial: Work to replace what was taken from those in need

The state and local communities will have to ensure food security after federal SNAP and other cuts.

Robotic hand playing hopscotch on a keyboard. Artifical intelligence, text generators, ai and job issues concept. Vector illustration.
Editorial: Keep a mindful eye on government use of AI chatbots

A public media report on government use of chatbots, including by Everett, calls for sound guidelines.

Gov. Bob Ferguson responds to U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi's demands that the state end so-called sanctuary policies. (Office of Governor of Washington)
Editorial: Governor’s reasoned defiance to Bondi’s ICE demands

In the face of threats, the 10th Amendment protects a state law on law enforcement cooperation.

toon
Editorial cartoons for Wednesday, Sept. 3

A sketchy look at the news of the day.… Continue reading

Welch: Blame a math mismatch for county’s budget deficit

The county promised more in pay than revenues now allow. It’s a problem it can avoid in the future.

Support local journalism

If you value local news, make a gift now to support the trusted journalism you get in The Daily Herald. Donations processed in this system are not tax deductible.