Richard Theodore Greener

Richard Theodore Greener (1844–1922) was a pioneering African-American scholar, excelling in elocution, philosophy, law and classics in the Reconstruction era. He broke ground as Harvard College's first Black graduate in 1870.[1] Within three years, he had also graduated from law school at the University of South Carolina, only to also be hired as its first Black professor, after briefly serving as associate editor for the New National Era, a newspaper owned and edited by Frederick Douglass.[1][2][3]

Richard Theodore Greener
Dean of Howard Law School
In office
1878 (1878)–1880 (1880)
Personal details
Born(1844-01-30)January 30, 1844
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
DiedMay 2, 1922(1922-05-02) (aged 78)
Chicago, Illinois
Resting placeGraceland Cemetery
NationalityAmerican
Political partyRepublican
ChildrenBelle da Costa Greene and 8 others
Alma materOberlin College (did not graduate)
Phillips Academy Andover
Harvard University (A.B.)
University of South Carolina (LL.B.)
ProfessionProfessor, Diplomat, Attorney
Signature

In 1875, Greener became the first African American elected to the American Philological Association, the primary academic society for classical studies in North America. In 1876, he was admitted to practice in the Supreme Court of South Carolina, and the following year he was also admitted to the Bar of the District of Columbia.[3] He went on to serve as dean of the Howard University School of Law.[4]

In 1898, he became America's first Black diplomat to a white country, serving in Vladivostok, Russia.[5] He went on to serve as an American representative during the Russo-Japanese War, but left the diplomatic service in 1905.[4][6]

In 1902, the Chinese government honored him for his service to the Boxer War, and his assistance to Shansi famine sufferers.[6] Liberia's Monrovia College awarded him an honorary Doctorate of Law in 1882, as did Howard University in 1907.[6] Phillips Academy and the University of South Carolina both grant annual scholarships in Greener's name.[7] Phillips Academy also named a central quadrangle after Greener in 2018, the same year the University of South Carolina honored him with a statue.[8]

Early life and education

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Richard Greener was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1844.[6] He moved with his family to Boston in 1853,[9] where Black children were unable to attend public school; the Massachusetts legislature did not prohibit school segregation until 1855. Only months after moving to Boston, Greener's father Richard Wesley left to participate in the California gold rush and never returned. After being homeschooled his first year in Boston, Greener enrolled at Broadway Grammar School in Cambridge, Massachusetts, where there were already integrated public schools. Greener dropped out in 1855 to financially support his mother working as a clerk and office boy at various businesses. However, he continued to educate himself. He attended meetings and lectures held by anti-slavery and women's rights activists, including Frederick Douglass, whose lectures he attended at every opportunity. Through contacts with employers and activists, he was provided access to private libraries and book collections.[9]

In 1862, he attended the Preparatory Department at Oberlin College (the department functioned as a College-preparatory school), with the financial support of his employer August Batchelder.[9] He studied for two years but did not finish. Instead, he finished his last year at Phillips Academy and graduated in 1865. He entered Harvard College that Fall, where he earned a bachelor's degree in 1870. His admission to Harvard was "an experiment" by the administration and paved the way for many more Black Harvard graduates.[1]

While at Harvard, he earned the Bowdoin Prize for elocution twice, which the Rochester Daily Democrat mentioned in an article on August 16, 1869:[10]

Richard Theodore Greener, a young colored man and a member of the senior class of Harvard College, is giving public readings in Philadelphia. Mr. Greener's history is that of a persevering young man who has succeeded in living down the prejudices against his race and color, and attaining by industry, ability, and good character, a position of which he may well feel proud. He was awarded last year, at Harvard College, the prize for reading, and this year he has drilled two young white men who have likewise obtained prizes in the same branch. His course at Harvard has throughout been honorable. He is the first colored youth who has ever passed through that college.

Academic career

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After graduating from Harvard, Greener served as a principal at the Institute for Colored Youth in Philadelphia from September 1870 until December 1872. He succeeded Octavius V. Catto, who was shot in a riot. From January 1 to July 1, 1873, he was principal of the Sumner High School, a colored preparatory school in Washington, D.C.[3] In 1874, he published Charles Sumner, the Idealist, Statesman and Scholar: An Address, Delivered on Public Day, June 29, 1874, at the Request of the Faculty of the University of South Carolina.

After leaving the Sumner School, Greener briefly took a job as associate editor of The New National Era in April 1873, working under editor Frederick Douglass.[3] He was also an associate editor for the National Encyclopedia for American Biography.[10]

University of South Carolina

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In October 1873, Greener accepted the professorship of mental and moral philosophy at the University of South Carolina, where he was the university's first African-American faculty member.[2]

He also served as a librarian there helping to "reorganize and catalog the library's holdings which were in disarray after the Civil War" and wrote a monograph on the rare books of the library.[11] His responsibilities included assisting in the departments of Latin and Greek and teaching classes in International Law and the Constitution of the United States.[3]

In 1875, Greener became the first African American to be elected a member of the American Philological Association, the primary academic society for classical studies in North America.

Howard Law School

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Greener graduated from the law school at the University of South Carolina and was admitted to practice in the Supreme Court of South Carolina on December 20, 1876.[3]

In June 1877, following the end of Reconstruction in South Carolina, the university was closed by Wade Hampton III. Greener moved to Washington and was admitted to the Bar of the District of Columbia on April 14, 1877.[3] He took a position as a professor at Howard University Law School and served as dean from 1878 to 1880, succeeding John H. Cooke.[3][4]

He also worked on a number of famous legal cases. He was associate counsel of Jeremiah M. Wilson in the defense of Samuel L. Perry and of Martin I. Townsend in the defense of Johnson Chesnut Whittaker in a court of inquiry in April and May 1880 where Towsend and Greener successfully gained Whittaker release and the granting of a court-martial. Greener assisted Daniel Henry Chamberlain in Whittaker's defense during the court-martial.[3][clarification needed][further explanation needed]

Public service and activism

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From 1876 to 1879, Greener represented South Carolina in the Union League of America and was president of the South Carolina Republican Association in 1887 and was active in freemasonry.[3] In 1875, Greener was appointed by the South Carolina Assembly to a commission to revise the South Carolina school system.

From 1880 until February 28, 1882, Greener served as a law clerk of the Comptroller of the United States Treasury.

In 1883, Greener and Frederick Douglass conducted a heated debate. Greener and the rising generation of Black leaders advocated moving away from political parties and white allies, while Douglass denounced them as "croakers."[12] Greener, who nonetheless still respected Douglass's achievements, helped organize a major convention to present Black grievances to the nation. Decades had passed since the Civil War, the Emancipation Proclamation, and years since the passage of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments, but these advances had been rolled back or left unenforced, while Jim Crow laws spread in the South. Greener joined younger Black leaders in questioning Douglass, who remained loyal to the Republican Party that had first fought for Black freedom but then abandoned the cause. Douglass accused Greener of writing anonymous attacks motivated by "ambition and jealousy" that charged the older leader with "trading off the colored vote of the country for office." Greener wrote that there were two Douglasses, "the one velvety, deprecatory, apologetic — the other insinuating, suggestive damning with shrug, a raised eyebrow, or a look of caution."[13]

From 1885 to 1892, Greener served as secretary of the Grant Monument Association, where he led the initial fundraising effort that brought in donations from 90,000 people worldwide to construct Grant's Tomb.[14][15] From 1885 to 1890, he was chief examiner of the civil service board for New York City and County. In the 1896 election, he served as the head of the Colored Bureau of the Republican Party in Chicago.[16]

Just as Greener opposed Douglass, he was on the Washington side of the growing split in the African American world. On the one side was accommodationist, and therefore politically powerful and adequately funded, Booker T. Washington.[citation needed] On the other were Monroe Trotter, W.E.B. DuBois, and their followers, who insisted that under the Constitution they had rights and that those rights should be respected.[citation needed] From it were born the Niagara Conferences, and from them the NAACP.[citation needed] Greener was so closely allied with Washington that Washington sent him to the Second Niagara Conference with the explicit charge of spying and reporting.[citation needed]

Diplomat

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Richard T. Greener circa c. 1887[17]

In 1898, Greener was appointed by President William McKinley as General Consul at Bombay, India. Soon he accepted a post as United States Commercial Agent in Vladivostok, Russia.[6] He successfully served as an American representative during the Russo-Japanese War but left the diplomatic service in 1905.[4]

Personal life

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On September 24, 1874, Greener married Genevieve Ida Fleet, and they had six children.

Greener separated from his wife upon learning that she listed their family as white on the census. This would harm all of the work he was doing in his fight for civil rights. After his posting to Vladivostok he took a Japanese common-law wife, Mishi Kawashima, with whom he had three children.

Though they never divorced, Fleet and her daughters changed their name to "Greene" to disassociate themselves from him so that no one would know that they were African American. One of his daughters, Belle da Costa Greene, became the personal librarian to J. P. Morgan and passed for white.[18]

Later life and death

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Greener's grave at Graceland Cemetery

Greener settled in Chicago with relatives. He held a job as an agent for an insurance company, practiced law, and occasionally lectured on his life and times. He died of natural causes in Chicago on May 2, 1922, aged 78.[4] He was buried at Graceland Cemetery.

His Harvard diploma and other personal papers were rediscovered in an attic in the South Side of Chicago in the early 21st century.[1] A great deal of discussion surrounds where the papers should be archived.

Legacy

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Along with having accomplished many African-American firsts, Greener earned several awards in his lifetime.

In 1902, the Chinese government decorated him with the Order of the Double Dragon for his service to the Boxer War and assistance to Shansi famine sufferers.[6]

He received two honorary Doctorates of Laws, from Monrovia College in Liberia in 1882 and Howard University in 1907.[6] Phillips Academy and University of South Carolina both grant annual scholarships in Greener's name.[7]

In 1984, Larry Francis Lebby painted a portrait of Greener, which is on display at the University of South Carolina.[19]

The central quadrangle at Phillips Academy was named in honor of Greener in 2018. The University of South Carolina erected a statue of Greener.[8]

In 2009, some of his personal papers were discovered in the attic of an abandoned home on the south side of Chicago by a member of a demolition crew.[1][2]

On February 21, 2018, a nine-foot statue of Greener was unveiled at the University of South Carolina.[20] It stands in front of the Thomas Cooper Library.[21]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e Janssen, Kim (March 11, 2012). "'It gives me gooseflesh': Remarkable find in South Side attic". Chicago Sun-Times. Archived from the original on March 13, 2012.
  2. ^ a b c Schafer, Susan A. (October 15, 2013). "Black Scholar's Post-Civil War Diploma Survives". Associated Press. Retrieved March 4, 2018.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Simmons, William J., and Henry McNeal Turner, Men of Mark: Eminent, Progressive and Rising, GM Rewell & Company, 1887, pp. 327–335.
  4. ^ a b c d e Mounter, Michael Robert. "A Brief Biography of Richard Greener". University of South Carolina. Retrieved March 16, 2012.
  5. ^ Katherine Reynolds Chaddock. 2017. Uncompromising Activist : Richard Greener, First Black Graduate of Harvard College. The Johns Hopkins University Studies in Historical and Political Science. 132nd Series (2017). Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=nlebk&AN=1501183&site=eds-live&scope=site .
  6. ^ a b c d e f g Hatley, Leshell (August 26, 2010). "Richard T. Greener: 1st Black Graduate of Harvard University". The Black Scholars Index. Archived from the original on December 27, 2010. Retrieved March 16, 2012.
  7. ^ a b "Richard T. Greener Endowment Fund". My Carolina Alumni Association. Retrieved March 16, 2012.
  8. ^ a b Wilks, Avery (January 29, 2017). "Statue to Honor 1st Black Professor". The State. Retrieved January 30, 2017.
  9. ^ a b c Mounter, Michael Robert (2002). "'Richard Theodore Greener: The idealist, statesman, scholar and South Carolinian'". Dissertation. ProQuest 305551040.
  10. ^ a b "A legal and political advisor, Richard Greener". African American Registry. Retrieved March 17, 2012.
  11. ^ "Richard T. Greener". University of South Carolina. November 23, 2013. Retrieved November 23, 2013.
  12. ^ Blight (2018), pp. 637.
  13. ^ Blight (2018), pp. 640–643.
  14. ^ National Park Service, U.S. Dept. of Interior (2012). General Grant (372-849/90989 ed.). Washington, DC: GPO.
  15. ^ Chaddock, Katherine Reynolds, "Ulysses S. Grant: A Monumental Undertaking", in Final Resting Places: Reflections on the Meaning of Civil War Graves, edited by Brian Matthew Jordan and Jonathan W. White. Athens, Georgia: The University of Georgia Press, 2023.
  16. ^ "Greener, Richard Theodore". South Carolina Encyclopedia. Retrieved February 5, 2019.
  17. ^ Image from The Colored American in 1900; older version is in Simmons, William J., and Henry McNeal Turner, Men of Mark: Eminent, Progressive and Rising, G. M. Rewell & Company, 1887, pp. 327-335.
  18. ^ Kuiper, Kathleen. "Belle da Costa Greene". britannica.com. Retrieved September 12, 2021.
  19. ^ Horn, Chris (February 12, 2018). "Larger than life: New statue of Richard T. Greener celebrates a forgotten chapter in USC's history". The University of South Carolina. Retrieved February 28, 2024.
  20. ^ "Statue in honor of Richard T. Greener unveiled at USC".
  21. ^ "Richard T. Greener Statue Unveiling | SGTV News4".

Further reading

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