The History of Blacks in the White House: Slavery and Service

Date: Tuesday, December 09, 2008, 3:46 am
By: Jesse J. Holland, Associated Press

Bookmark and Share

Former White House butler William Bowen Jr. poses at his home. His father, William Bowen, was a White House butler as well. (AP)

WASHINGTON - The first child born at the White House was the grandson of President Thomas Jefferson. The second child born there was his property - the African-American baby of Jefferson's two slaves.

Slaves not only helped build the White House, but also for decades men and women in bondage served America's presidents and first families as butlers, cooks and maids.

Two hundred years later, Barack Obama's election as the 44th president - the first black chief executive - is casting a spotlight on the complicated history of African-Americans and the exalted place they called home - the White House.

During and after slavery, black workers made the White House function. Obama's entry on Jan. 20, 2009, will be a moment for the ages that few of them could imagine.

"I'm very proud of the fact we're going to have an African-American president and I think the help is going to be pleased to be working for an African-American president," said 89-year-old William Bowen Jr., a second-generation White House butler who worked for Presidents Dwight Eisenhower to George H.W. Bush.

When Bowen started at the White House in 1957, the civil rights movement was still in its infancy, segregation was still legal and African-Americans were just penetrating the upper echelons of government service.

People like Bowen, employed at the White House before the civil rights and feminist movements, were the "help."

Surrounded by presidential memorabilia in his suburban Maryland home - including a newspaper trumpeting Obama's victory - Bowen is contemplating coming out of retirement to work for the first black president.

"I never thought, coming up, that this would ever happen. Not in my lifetime," Bowen said.

His father, William Bowen, left his job at the Washington Navy Yard after World War I to become a White House butler. He soon recruited his son to work there as a mail carrier and part-time butler. The senior Bowen taught him the White House domestic code of silence, which White House workers observe to this day.

"Pay attention and don't be talking to people while on your assignment," Bowen Jr. remembered his father lecturing. "Don't unnecessarily engage some of the guests unless they speak to you."

It was hard sometimes, with celebrities such as Duke Ellington and Pearl Bailey frequenting White House parties and dinners. To this day, Bowen remembers conversations with presidents and first ladies, but they are something he still will not repeat.

"You don't talk about things that happened on the job," Bowen said.

A century before the Bowens, slaves labored inside and outside the White House. Washington planner Pierre L'Enfant rented slaves from nearby owners to dig the foundation for the White House. White House designer James Hoben used some of his slave carpenters to build it.

President George Washington forced slaves from Mount Vernon to work as staff inside "the President's House" in Philadelphia during his term. Thus began a tradition of enslaved men and women working for the president in his residence, a practice that continued until the 1850s.

Not only did they work in the White House, enslaved men and women lived there as well. According to the White House Historical Association, the slave and servant quarters were in the basement, now called the ground floor. The rooms now include the library, china room, offices and the formal Diplomatic Reception Room. At least one African-American baby was born there, in 1806 to Fanny and Eddy, two of Jefferson's slaves. The child, who was also considered a slave, died two years later.

History values these slaves for more than just their labor.

Paul Jennings, President James Madison's personal slave, told the first tale of White House life written by someone who lived .....


Bookmark and Share
Please Login or Register to Rate this article



Please Login or Register to post comments on this article

  |   Read More Comments





More Headlines
New York Muslim Groups Decry Hostile Atmosphere

They gathered on the steps of City Hall to call for a stop to religious intolerance

Some States Haven't Changed Coke-Crack Disparity

Missouri and New Hampshire have disparities greater than the one in the revised federal law.

Lawmaker Says Mistakes Used to Distort Her Image

Texas Rep. Eddie Bernice Johnson said Wednesday she didn't shortchange others to benefit her own family.

Obama: 'Time to Turn Page' in Iraq - and at Home

Obama formally ended the U.S. combat role in Iraq after seven long years of bloodshed.

Troops, Families Glad to Hear End of Iraq Combat

"I'm just glad we're in a total transition now," Steve Baskis said, snapping the fingers on a nerve-damaged hand.

CBC Foundation to Audit its Scholarship Program

CBCF Chair Rep. Donald Payne says an extensive audit is underway.

Obama's Goal: End War, Win Mideast Peace

He will have but a moment before trying to hasten peace between Israelis and Palestinians.

Texas Rep. Admits She Wrongfully Violated Rules

Rep. Eddie Bernice Johnson gave thousands in CBCF scholarships to family members.

Obamas Dish on the First Daughters' Doings

The president and first lady put their girls off-limits to the news media after they moved to the White House.

'Reclaim the Dream' Pays Homage to MLK

"They may have the platform, but we have the dream,” said the Rev. Al Sharpton Saturday.

Career Central
Search millions of job listings from across the web. New jobs added daily!



Post a Job on Black America Web!
advertising
advertising
advertising