[250 years ago this week, Rhode Island banned the slave trade. That significant moment was just one of many in this littlest state’s story, so this week I’ll AmericanStudy a handful of Ocean State histories, leading up to a special post on works through which you can learn more about Rhode Island!]
On two
ways to think about Rhode Island’s famous role in Gilded Age America.
Once again
I’ll begin this post by asking you to peruse prior writing of mine, in this case
my September
2013 blog series on Newport stories (inspired by my first visit to the historic
home The
Breakers). If five posts is too much of an ask, you ]can focus in
particular on the
Friday culmination, a post on the question of whether we should preserve
such Gilded Age mansions.
Welcome
back! In that Friday post I quoted the famous “white elephants” line from Henry
James’ “The
Sense of Newport” (1906), an essay that he originally published in Harper’s and then turned into a chapter
in his interesting travel and autobiographical book The
American Scene (1907). James uses that phrase as part of a concluding
paragraph in which he absolutely lambasts both the mansions and the Gilded Age
culture of embarrassing excess they reflect, building to his banger of a final
sentence for the essay/chapter, “The answer to which,
I think, can only be that there is absolutely nothing to be done; nothing but
to let them stand there always, vast and blank, for reminder to those concerned
of the prohibited degrees of witlessness, and of the peculiarly awkward
vengeances of affronted proportion and discretion.” In our own moment of
excess and McMansions and an even more flagrantly rich 1% and so on, we could
stand to reread and learn from James on those Newport white elephants.
As much as
the Newport mansions reflected specific Gilded Age contexts, however, it’s
equally (if not indeed more) important to link them to the historical
anniversary that is the reason for this week’s Rhode Island Studying series. For
one thing, there’s no doubt that a good bit of the wealth of places like
Newport was inherited and generational wealth tied to the fortunes built by and
through the slave trade and slavery in the colony and state (which didn’t
abolish slavery itself until its 1843 Constitution). And for another thing, while of
course much of the wealth that build Newport’s Gilded Age mansions came from
individuals and families who were not part of Rhode Island history, that only
meant that they were even more consistently linked to national legacies of
slavery—as exemplified by the
Vanderbilts, the family behind The Breakers. So on both those levels, as an
extension of Rhode Island history and a reflection of American history, Gilded
Age Newport was not something new so much as an embarrassing reminder of the
worst of our foundational stories.
Special
post this weekend,
Ben
PS. What
do you think? Other Ocean State stories you’d highlight?
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