Almost two years ago there was an excited energy in Atlanta.
The state of Georgia was alive with anticipation. The Falcons had finally made
it to the Superbowl and all of Georgia gathered to support their team
We looked forward to seeing the Falcon’s “RISE UP” and win
against the Patriots. After the first half of the Superbowl, the Falcons were up
by 25 points. According to ESPN, “no team had ever made up more than a 10-point
deficit to win the super Bowl.” But when the game ended, the score was Patriots
34 and Falcons 28. My daughter was so
upset she stormed upstairs crying and Falcons fans everywhere mourned the loss.
For some reason my reaction was the opposite. The very next
morning I woke up and bought Falcon’s t-shirts for the entire family. I know
that someday the Falcons will go to the Super Bowl again and when they do, I will
be ready with t-shirts for the whole family.
This isn’t the Falcons year yet but the excitement is still
in the city of Atlanta as they host the Super Bowl. For those watching the game
at home the NFL will be launching a new “Inspire Change” initiative with
television spots. The initiative seeks to “create positive change in
communities across the country.”
One community that can use some positive change is Georgia’s
own Stone Mountain. For years Stone
Mountain has been home to the world’s largest confederate monument. However, it
is time for Stone Mountain to become a Civil War monument that includes some of
the hard-working slaves, the backbone of the south. William and Ellen Craft would
be excellent candidates.
William and Ellen lived on different plantations in Southern
Georgia. Ellen’s father was the white plantation owner and her mother was one
of his slaves. Ellen was born a slave with a light complexion. The mistress of
the house hated her for it and treated her very badly. At age eleven Ellen was
given to her half-sister in another town and separated from her mother.
William Craft also knew the sadness and loss associated with
being a slave. His parents, two brothers
and a sister were sold at auction. When William and his fourteen-year-old
sister found themselves on the auction block as well, he pled with his sister’s
new owner and the auctioneer to let him say good-bye. They refused and unable
to do anything, he simply had to look on from a distance as his sister with
tears rolling down her cheeks in despair bowed a final farewell.
After experiencing so much family separation William and
Ellen struggled with the thought of getting married even though they loved each
other. They had separate owners and knew that any children they had together
would be born slaves. So instead of subjecting their future children to that life
and possibly being separated from them or each other, they came up with a plan
to escape to freedom. Ellen dressed up like a white slave owning plantation
man. She wrapped her face in cloth and pretended to have a tooth ache and
wrapped her arm up as if it was injured as well. She cut her hair, wore male
clothes, and even donned a top hat.
Ellen played the part
of William’s master. With a few days off for Christmas, they started their
1,000-mile journey to the north. It was not easy, and they could not travel
together. Ellen had to stay in character and remain with the white people and
William had to travel with the other slaves. After they reached freedom in the
north, they began to tell others about their story and the life of a slave in
the south. Eventually, they had to travel to England in order to remain free
and safe. They never stopped telling their story and fighting for freedom,
though. When slaves became free in all of America, they returned to Georgia and
started a school, that they funded with their own money, to help educate former
slaves and the poor.
William and Ellen saw the injustice of slavery and rose up
to escape it. Then they fought it and came back to Georgia to help others
create a better life for themselves. Having them carved onto Stone Mountain
would remind us of their story and others like them. Their story is part of the
south’s story and deserves to be immortalized along with the confederate
generals that are currently carved onto Stone mountain.
Now there may be some who say that we should get rid of the
confederate generals from the monument completely. However, even these men have
a story to tell that is worth listening to.
General Thomas J. “Stonewall” Jackson’s life was not easy.
His parents both died before he was eight, leaving him an orphan. He was
considered by one of his uncles to be the least bright of the Jackson children.
He made it into West Point college by the skin of his teeth through sheer
determination and was ranked 94th when he started; dead last in his
class. He worked hard and finished 17th.
Jackson’s first wife, Ellie as he affectionately called her,
died after delivering a still born baby boy. When their funeral was over,
Jackson stood at their single grave as snow fell around him until his pastor
came and led him away.
Jackson’s faith was a big part of who he was. He prayed and
read scriptures daily. He prayed everywhere and about everything. He even
prayed before opening a letter to be prepared for its contents.
Jackson’s belief in God made him want to help all people, so
he started a black Sunday School. Because of this act his friend once remarked
that “He was emphatically the black man’s friend.” Although he owned a few
slaves, he did not try to become a slave owner and he was kind and generous to
the few he did own.
Additionally, Jackson was a unionist and he did not want to
go to war. He said, “It is painful to discover with what unconcern they speak
of war and threaten it. They do not know its horrors. I have seen enough of it
to look upon it as the sum of all evils.” Jackson even went to his pastor to
talk about uniting everyone in prayer to avoid war.
Then, why did Jackson go to war as a confederate? Well,
Jackson’s first loyalty was to his state. He did not want the government to
take power from Virginia or to invade it. When the federal government did, he
fought back with his fellow Virginians. Jackson’s second wife Anna said that he
never would have gone to war to fight to keep slavery going.
Once war began Jackson earned his nickname of “Stonewall”
because he taught his men to stand their ground and not retreat. Jackson would
probably love to be a navy seals trainer if he were alive today. During his day
he was known for pushing his men faster and further than was thought possible.
General “Stonewall” Jackson’s determination inspired the
south, but what he really wanted was to live the American dream by owning a
home and living a simple life with his wife. Thinking back on his life he said,
“I too have crosses and am at times deeply afflicted, but however sore may be
the trials they lose their poignancy and instead of producing injury I feel that
I am but improved by the ordeal.”
Like Jackson after trials, the United States became a better
country after the sore affliction of the Civil War. It became a better country
because finally all of its citizens were free. Although, the continued freedoms
of blacks, women, minorities, and so many more are still fought for today.
There is hope that someday we will all be treated and paid as equals.
In the meantime, having a monument dedicated to a bigger
picture of the civil war would be a step in the right direction. History should
not be erased or forgotten but learned from. I am still hoping the Falcons can
learn from their game with the Patriots and “rise up” to win a Super Bowl
someday. But for now, let’s “Inspire Change” to Stone Mountain. Let’s create a
Civil War Monument and remember both the confederate generals and the true
back-bone of the south, the slaves. In remembering, we will not repeat the
mistakes of the past and we will show that “United we stand.”
Please join with me in creating a permanent change. Help improve Stone Mountain and learn from the past. The Confederate generals were far from perfect, but none of us are perfect. If the only people we made statues and momuments of were perfect, then we never would have any besides Jesus Christ. However, there is good in many of us and we need to see the good as well as acknowledge the bad.
https://www.change.org/p/carve-slaves-william-and-ellen-craft-onto-stone-mountain
Works Cited -
Information on William and Ellen Craft -
Craft, William and Ellen. "Running a Thousand Miles For Freedom." Start Publishing LLC eBook edition, 2012.
McDonough, Yona Zelis. "What Was the Underground Railroad?" Penguin Workshop, 2013.
Information on General Thomas J. "Stonewall" Jackson -
Gwynee, S.C. "Rebel Yell: the Violence, Passion, and Redemption of Stonewall Jackson." Scribner, 2014.
Please join with me in creating a permanent change. Help improve Stone Mountain and learn from the past. The Confederate generals were far from perfect, but none of us are perfect. If the only people we made statues and momuments of were perfect, then we never would have any besides Jesus Christ. However, there is good in many of us and we need to see the good as well as acknowledge the bad.
https://www.change.org/p/carve-slaves-william-and-ellen-craft-onto-stone-mountain
Works Cited -
Information on William and Ellen Craft -
Craft, William and Ellen. "Running a Thousand Miles For Freedom." Start Publishing LLC eBook edition, 2012.
McDonough, Yona Zelis. "What Was the Underground Railroad?" Penguin Workshop, 2013.
Information on General Thomas J. "Stonewall" Jackson -
Gwynee, S.C. "Rebel Yell: the Violence, Passion, and Redemption of Stonewall Jackson." Scribner, 2014.