tv QA CSPAN February 8, 2016 6:00am-7:01am EST
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barack obama and his campaign. there was a lot of interest in african american history, having the first african-american president in the white house. i was lucky enough to be assigned by the associated press to cover obama that weekend. i remember pulling up to the obamas' townhouse in chicago thinking about what book will i write next. and right at that spot is when it hit me. i got so excited about the topic and so i immediately called my editor. she immediately tamped down my enthusiasm and told me to think about it. to make sure that i had a really good idea about what i wanted to do.
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brian: what was the idea? jesse: the idea was to write a story about the african-american slaves who lived inside the white house. back then, the country was still talking about how great and how unique it would be if an african-american president lived inside the white house. i said to myself, i understand that would be great but he cannot have been the first african-american to live there. and then the thought process went on -- so who were the first african-americans to live there? we knew there were african-american butlers but i thought there had to be someone before them. i decided to write a book about the african-american slaves that lived inside the white house with the first presidents and that is when "the invisibles: the untold story of african american slaves in the white house" got its start. brian: we have an artist rendering of the first presidents house in new york city. you say in your book that there were nine slaves working for george washington inside that building. explain how that happens.
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jesse: as most people know, george washington did not live inside the white house. he lived inside executive residences in new york city and philadelphia. when this country first started, congress did not provide funds for butlers and maids and wa -- washer women. it did not provide funds for domestic staff inside the white house. the president's either had to come out of their own pocket and pay for these staffers or they had to bring in their slaves from their plantations. the majority of the first presidents and the founding fathers who became president were all slave owners. they would bring in their slaves from the plantations. george washington did this as well. he brought slaves to new york city and philadelphia from mount vernon. he brought them to new york city and philadelphia. in both of those places, today we would consider them to be non-slaveholding states but back then, slavery was allowed in
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both pennsylvania and new york city. george washington took advantage of that to bring slaves from mount vernon up to new york. brian: you tell a story about the machinations they went through to keep the slaves in the president's house. jesse: one of the rules in pennsylvania at that time was that any slaveowner who brought a slave across the state lines and into pennsylvania and kept them there in six months, after six months had passed, those slaves automatically became free. george washington is no dummy. he does not want to keep bringing people from out vernon to philadelphia, have them for six months and then have them
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walk away with no compensation. what washington did was every five months and a couple of weeks, he would decide to take his household fact to mount vernon. and then, they would turn around and go back to pennsylvania starting the six-month clock all over again. he did this over and over during his time in pennsylvania to ensure that the slaves would not be freed. none of his slaves were dummies. they knew what he was doing at this point. that is why one of his slaves took this opportunity to actually escape from george washington. her name was oney judge. she was martha washington's personal slave. she had been with the washingtons her entire life. she was born into slavery with the washingtons. and she had been with them her entire life. as the president's term was winding down, oney judge saw
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that if she ever stepped back onto mount vernon she would never escape. while the washington were packing up and getting ready to go back to mount vernon, oney judge was packing her own things. one day, as a washingtons were eating dinner, she walked out the back door. she walked down to the wharf and sailed away. it took a couple of days for the washingtons to realize you not been packing to go back to virginia, she was packing to escape. but she actually made it up to the northeast where she would live out the rest of her life without ever having to go back to virginia. it is not that the washingtons did not want her back. george washington actually put advertisements in newspapers trying to get people to find oney judge. he sent a couple of relatives, i won't call them slave catchers. he sent them to the area where he thought she had escaped to to see if they could find her.
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one of them found her. however, by that point, oney judge was enough apart part of that community where the community decided that they would warn her in advance and let her get away before the slave catchers showed up. she got to live the rest of her life out as a free woman. brian: how much was a slave worth in the george washington era? jesse: it depends on who the was. most slaves were bought as children. if you were going out to buy a slave you had a choice. you could buy a slave as a child
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or by a fully grown slave or something in between. the money amount would depend on what exactly you want. for most house slaves who served as maids or valets, you would likely buy a younger one so you could train them. william lee was bought as a young child specifically to serve as a valet for george washington. in today's money, it would be about five dollars. but he was bought when he was very young. if a fully grown slave, they could go for much, much more. someone who is a cook, like the hemmings family with thomas jefferson. if someone was buying a fully grown slave who was trained in french cuisine, they would be much more. for a lot of the presidents, they either inherited their slaves or they bought them as children to work inside the white house. that way they knew what the slave was taught to do because they taught the slaves themselves. brian: what kind of contract was there?
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to own another person? jesse: it depends on where you bought them from. a lot of slaves in the presidential households, they ended up being the sons and daughters of previous slaves. a lot of the slaves that were used inside the white house were not bought, they had grown up on their plantations. when they did go out and buy slaves, the contracts would typically say -- slave x is being purchased by slaveowner a from slaveowner b. as we went through the records, and i had a lot of help going through the archives, when we went back and looked through some of the records, there were very few presidents who actually bought slaves while inside the white house. andrew jackson actually was one of the few who did and john tyler did as well. andrew jackson did it openly.
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he needed some extra help inside the white house to help the household run correctly so he bought gracie bradley. here in washington, d.c. interestingly, gracie's sister actually worked inside the white house as well but as a free woman. she wanted her sister to work in the white house as well and she recommended to andrew jackson that he go purchase her and he did. gracie bradley turned out to be -- he bought her is like a cook, but it turns out that gracie bradley ends up being the best andstress in the area
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she became the master seamstress in the hermitage in tennessee. she ended up living out her whole life with the jackson family because her sister wanted her closer to her in the white house. other presidents, like john tyler did not want people to know that they were buying slaves. when you get to tyler, you are getting closer and closer to the civil war. they did not want people to know what they were doing. tyler would go out and hire a middleman who would go out and buy slaves and then transfer the slaves to tyler. tyler was so adamant that no one would know what he was doing, but he refused to use any of the money that he was being paid as president to buy those slaves. he did it out of his personal funds. presidents have had all different types of ways to get slaves into their hands. some wanted people to know that they were doing it and some did not. so, they all had their different
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ways of doing it. brian: a lot of stories in the book, george w the white house with the obamas with the unveiling of his portrait and see what that triggers in your research. [video clip] president bush: when the british burned the white house in 1814, dolly madison famously saved this portrait of the first george w. now, michelle -- if anything happens, there is your man. mrs. obama: i promise you -- i promise. i am going straight for it. and i am sure it will be closer, and i will get right to it. brian: what are you thinking? jesse: one of the great stories is that dolly madison comes and saves the portrait of george washington. i don't think that is exactly
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what happened because one of the great things i found out, was paul jennings. paul jennings was one of the first slaves, he was one of the first people to write a tell-all memoir about the white house. dolly madison and her story about her saving that portrait of george washington in the white house when the british came to burn it -- he said that is not exactly what happened even though it was a great story that dolly madison told. but it was not exactly what happened. according to mr. jennings, dolly madison did not have anything to do with saving that painting. he and a couple of other workers inside the white house were the ones that came and pulled that painting off the wall, put it in a wagon and shipped it away.
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there are some people who would argue that given his relationship with the madisons, and i will say that his relationship with them was not the best because they broke several promises to him. but a lot of people say that his account of what happened with that painting is probably more trustworthy than dolly madison's account. i tend to believe mr. jennings, because, you know, he actually wrote his down and put it in his book. like i said, it was one of the first memoirs written about white house life and probably one of the first books written by a slave that got published inside the united states. brian: you can read it online. jesse: you can read it anywhere. it is a great look. i tend to believe him but i will say he had a reason to hold a grudge against the madison because james madison had told him before he died that he was going to be freed.
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after james madison died, he goes over to dolly madison's hands and at this point, dolly madison is running out of money. she is destitute. instead of following her husband's wishes to free his slaves after he died, she starts selling them. one of the few she kept there at the end was paul jennings. he expected her to follow president madison's wishes and free him but she never did. i will say that he did have a reason to hold a grudge against her but i still tend to think his story is true. now, luckily for him, he ends up being sold to daniel webster. who eventually frees him. for him, the story ends up ok in the end.
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but, he was no fan of the madisons, and especially dolly madison. i can see he probably got a little bit of pleasure in poking a hole in the story that she was becoming more famous for. brian: i want to put on the screen a list of presidents who had slaves at any time. 12 out of 18 had slaves at some point in their lives. while they were in office. george washington, thomas jefferson, james munroe, andrew jackson. john tyler, james polk, and zachary taylor. those that owned slaves but not while they were in the white
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house included martin van buren, andrew johnson, and ulysses grant. who had the most slaves? jesse: washington, jefferson, and maybe taylor had the most. keep in mind, both monticello and mount vernon were huge moneymaking plantations. i would tend to bet, and both washington and jefferson had in the hundreds at some point in their lives. i would tend to guess that one of those two would be the largest slave owners. it is hard to count at any one point because keep in mind, that when you are owning a slave family, the slaves are also having children. those numbers would fluctuate up and down. still, even with that, i would expect it would be either washington or jefferson. brian: you tell stories about slaves, not a service of -- body servants of the presidents that literally slept in the room with them. can you remember one in particular? jesse: go back to william lee who was the body servant of george washington. everywhere that george washington went, you would find billy lee. it is probably safe to say, the
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beyond phyllis wheatley at that time, billy lee was probably the most famous african-american in all of america. you did not find george washington during the revolutionary war without billy lee. when washington crossed the delaware, billy lee was right there with him. when general cornwallis surrendered, washington and lee were there together. during the revolutionary war, billy lee's job was to make sure that george washington had everything he needed. whether it was a horse, a telescope, a gun, to run messages. billy lee was basically washington's number two. one story i found especially interesting, a group of southerners and a group of northerners looking ahead to the civil war years in advance got into an argument in a revolutionary war camp. billy lee and washington hear about this argument which is about to break out into a fight. and washington grabs his horse that billy lee brings him and he
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gallops into the middle of the argument. right there behind him is billy lee on his horse. even when all of these battles are going on and george washington is out there, billy lee is right there next to him. if something happened to washington's horse, billy lee would have to give him his horse and follow along on his feet. when washington woke up in the morning, billy lee was there. when he went to bed at night, it was billy lee's job to take off the wig and the clothing. make sure that washington had the food he needed and the bible. it was his job, he was basically washington's number two, to make sure that everything around him,
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washington did not have to think about it. but keeping up with washington was a chore. it's not like it was easy. as we go on in history, we find people like washington's parker custisge lee, who ends up being a relative of bobby lee. he ends up saying that billy lee was probably the second best horseman in the country behind george washington simply because he had to be to keep up with him. when you start talking about
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body servants, these were the men who were entrusted with the day-to-day care and keeping of the president. they got their clothing. they got their wigs. they made sure that they got to bed at night. they made sure they got up in the morning. most of them lived in the same room with the president. brian: you were telling a story in front of one of our cameras back in 2010. years ago on a book you wrote called "black men built the the capital." i want you to see this. [video clip] jesse: once the lees had left arlington house, the union forces crossed the potomac and took over the land. one union general decided he never wanted robert e. lee to ever return to arlington house. the way he ensured that this would not happen was he began burying union and confederate soldiers in robert e. lee's front yard. that is how arlington national cemetery got started. another way they tried to ensure that general lee would never return was that they gave part of the plantation to some of his
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freed slaves. what these freed slaves did with the land was come up with a town called freedman's village. as you can see, it was not exactly small. they had their own churches. they had their own schools. they even had their own hospital. we have even been able to find a photograph of the people of freedman's village in the national archives. brian: that is where the cemetery took over freedman's village. brian: the cemetery is freeman village. what happened to all of the free blacks? jesse: eventually, even though
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freedman's village was the city unto itself, it brought in people from all around. even sojourner truth ended up living there for awhile. eventually, the view they had from that hill, people discovered it and they were kicked off of the land and it became part of -- it was returned to the custis' state and it became arlington national cemetery. so now, where friedman's village stood before is part of arlington national cemetery. there is no trace of the city left. one of the things i have discovered since i gave that talk, one of the churches that was in freedman's village called the old bell church -- i was out doing a talk and a woman came up to me at the end and said that
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her church had that bell. it moved from freedman's village to alexandria county. some of the people who lived in freedman's village moved across the potomac and down and now they are still in those areas. i run into them now and again when i am giving talks about washington history. someone will say that my great great grandfather and lived in in freedmans village. the people and their descendents are still here but there is no trace of the city left. brian: you tell us in the book that you started thinking about this in 2008. you showed an early draft to your father and he proclaimed this to be a good book. is dad still alive? jesse: yes he is. i am originally from a small town called holly springs. my parents were both educators. retired educators now.
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my mother taught english. -- ae north mississippi at for years and years. my dad taught science and industrial arts in the memphis city school system. where i grew up in my early years, i grew up in memphis and then my parents moved back to mississippi, where we still live on the same land that our great great great grandfather got after the civil war. it is a cotton farm. so my family is still there. , being the oldest son, you're are still expected to go into the family business but that would never happen with me. i always knew i wanted to be a writer. my parents really encouraged me to follow my dreams and to write. but, my dad is a farmer. when he stopped teaching
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time, he went into farming full-time. he reads but i would not call him a voracious reader. when he reads something and says it is good it is high praise. that is probably one of the greatest compliments i have had in my entire life. that my father read the early draft and said it was good. brian: how far back at you gone in the genealogy of your own family? jesse: i got started when my daughter was born in 2006. i have a nine-year-old daughter rita and a son, jesse holland the third. i always wanted them to know who their family was. because we live here in washington, and maryland. most of my family is still in mississippi. i want them to know who their people are. i started tracing our family history and started talking to older relatives to find out who our people are.
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we have gone back to just before the civil war where the hollands first bought an acre of land in mississippi. my great great great -- make sure i get all of the greats right -- great great great grandfather, who was also named jesse holland bought an acre of land and built a store. outside of hudsonville, mississippi. that acre of land is still in my family. that is the one acre we will never sell. that is where we started. we will always keep that acre of land. my parents are both from the north mississippi area. my mom is from denton county and my dad is from marshall county, they actually met in high school, so my roots are there in the and i always make sure that i can go back. i go back as often as i can. brian: ole miss.
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jesse: i came out of old mess in 1993 but in stayed an extra year because i became editor of the daily mississippian -- the campus newspaper from 1993-1994. i always knew, from high school that i was going to do some type of writing, but it was in college i decided that i would be a journalist. i have been with ap since 1994. since i left ole miss. i started as an intern in columbia, south carolina. i stayed there for a few years and then went up to albany, new york, to help cover hillary clinton's first senate campaign and then came to washington, d.c., in 2000. i have been in washington, d.c., ever since.
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brian: back to the book. the horses at the white house. jesse: oh, yes. there is a great book and this, maybe somebody has already written it. but andrew jackson, american war hero, also, a big gambling man. he loved the horses. he brought -- i've feel pretty safe in saying that he brought the only franchise to the white house. he imported some of his thoroughbreds from tennessee and brought them up to washington, d.c., and kept them at the white house. he was also a politician. he made sure that the horses were always run under someone else's name. but, they belonged to him. and andrew jackson ran horses at racetracks around the d.c. area while still president. he was a stable owner, he was almost like dan snyder where he was the major sporting franchise owner in washington, d.c. if you wanted to run a horse, more than likely andrew jackson's horse was in the race.
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he had some incredible thoroughbreds. of the most as one powerful racing owners at that time will stop he basically ran reising in tennessee, and when he became president, he actually whitea new stable on the house grounds to keep his horses. he brought some of the black jockeys he kept as slaves in tennessee up to washington, d.c., to stay in the stable with the horses. we have not been able to identify many of these men but we do know that at least one of
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them, his name is jesse. there was a great story where jackson is running a horse out in the prince george's county area. his vice president, martin van buren, he is actually -- he was not quite the sporting man that jackson was. so jackson is trying to get one , of the horses under control. he has a high-spirited horse and the jockey is not controlling him the way that jackson wants him to. jackson moves towards the track. van buren, not knowing what is going on is also moving towards the track. jackson and the jockey get the horse under control and jackson backs up. van buren does not. you have a man sitting on a horse in front of the starting gates. jackson gets martin van buren and moves him back and that one
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thing follows jackson's vice president or the rest of his life. that jackson had to pull him out of the way of the horses like he was a child. him in some people's minds as jackson's puppet which follows him for the rest of his career. brian: you write about george the slave. jesse: monkey simon was the greatest black jockey of his time. brian: four feet six inches tall. jesse: he is a jockey. you have to be small. he was the one jockey along with the horse maria that jackson could not beat. he tried over and over. he sent different horses out there.
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monkey simon publicly got into trash talking with andrew jackson and got away with it. now keep in mind, andrew jackson was a man known for his temper. he would duel, he would fight. he was a rough and ready kind of guy. because of of his victories over jackson over and over, monkey simon would publicly tease him. he would talk about how jackson looked and he even wrote and if -- and embarrassing song about jackson that he would saying. but because of his skill, jackson never retaliated.
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even going toward the end of his life, one of the things that jackson would say, one thing he regretted was that he never got to beat monkey simon and maria. he never got to beat them. we do discover later on that he and simon become friends. i don't know if he ends up owning simon, we don't know if he owned simon or if he rented him but we know they had relations later on and the two ended up talking once or twice. he is probably one of the only living people that said something bad to jackson's face. brian: another slave involved with the horses. ephraim complained that he had been attacked by a white man.
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how many slaves did andrew jackson have total? jesse: andrew jackson had slaves up in the hundreds. when we look at it now, it is weird. he owned people. but, he had affection for the people he owned. he was not a slave owner known for mistreating his slaves and he would stand up for them when someone else attacked them. brian: let me read -- this man is talking about jackson. jackson went to tennessee, beat up the man. with they have a cane so severely that tea was laid up for war five weeks. he everd him that if touched his slave again or any of the others, he would shoot him on-site.
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jesse: you know that if you messed with anyone that jackson liked, that jackson would come for you. that included political allies and it went all the way to his slaves. he called them his servants but they were his slaves. if you got anywhere close to mistreating someone that belonged to jackson you had to deal with jackson. one of his slaves was charged with murder because of a christmas party fight. someone dies. some of jackson's political enemies in tennessee decided they would charge jackson's slave with murder.
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most of the time, you would expect something like that to happen and the slave owner would try to negotiate or try to get this to go away. you would not expect what jackson did. tell them that first of all, i am a lawyer and you need to prove to me this case. if you don't, you will make this go away because you are not going to use my slaves to attack me for political reasons. jackson himself took over that case and made sure that his people were not treated unfairly. they ended up getting off because it was a general melee. it was not actually one person attacking another. and so jackson ends up getting his slaves, getting the charges dropped against his slaves. he went above and beyond what you would expect a slave owner to do for his slaves back in that time.
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brian: let us go through a bunch of stories quickly. because we are running out of time. william andrew johnson. he was a slave of andrew johnson. where did he get his name? jesse: from the person he was working for. this is one of those areas where we have to be careful because we don't know for a fact. we don't know the genealogy as well as we should. we know he worked for andrew johnson. we know he lived with him. we don't know if he was related to andrew johnson. that has never been proven one way or the other. but he was there with andrew johnson his entire life. the johnsons were also from tennessee. we could see from some of the information we could find, he came up to washington with the johnsons. and went back to tennessee with he left the white
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house. he is one of the few slaves that we know that was actually honored by a u.s. president. after johnson died and later in his life, he actually come up -- he actually -- william -- came back to washington and got a tour of the white house and got a silver tipped cane as a gift from president roosevelt that he took home with him. we know for sure -- we know pretty well that he is probably the only slave that has actually been honored by a u.s. president. brian: you say james buchanan, the president, right near the civil war time, freed a few slaves were political reason. jesse: once we get close to the civil war, that the press and the public, especially up north are getting a lot more squeamish about slaveholders and presidents who are slaveholders.
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buchanan decided since he owned slaves, he decided that he needed to get some of his slaves out of his name. he decided -- he transfers some of them to his sister who eventually freed them. when we get to buchanan, we are finding out that the presidents are being more careful about publicly being slave owners and they start divesting themselves of any public holdings of slavery. brian: it surprises a lot of people to learn that ulysses grant owned slaves. jesse: it surprised me as well. you would not think that the man put in charge of the u.s. army during the civil war would actually be a slave owner himself. but he was.
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he inherited his slaves through marriage. he did not go out and buy slaves. he married a woman whose family owned slaves. one of the things he did himself was that he personally freed that slave. we actually have -- there is a copy of the letter he wrote which gave the slave his freedom which shows where he was in his mind about slavery. that does not mean that he was not a slave owner, he was because of his marriage. but he actually freed that slave. brian: james monroe is the first to suggest the elimination of slavery. a lot of presidents said they were going to eliminate slavery but not until they died or their wives died were they ever freed. jesse: one of the things that i saw throughout this entire timeline was that most of the founding fathers and early president knew in their minds that slavery was wrong.
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they knew it. but, they were not willing to inconvenience their own lives to make that come true. so what to say, when i die, my slaves will become free or when my wife dies, the slaves would become free. they did not do it during their , but since they knew, and it is clear that most of them knew it was wrong. they did not want to perpetuate it to another generation. keep in mind, they also, while trying to be kind, put their wives in a bad situation. because, the president dies first and you tell all of the slaves that you will be free once my wife dies. the president is gone and the
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only thing standing between those slaves and their freedom is one woman's life. and this is the woman you are cooking for, cleaning for. a simple accident gives them freedom. a lot of first ladies after finding out the situation they were in, started moving toward making the slaves free more quicker than letting them wait until they died. brian: the story of john tyler, his fiancee, she was about 24 years old on the ship princeton, secretary of the navy and secretary of state died. her father died. a slave named armistead. explain that story. jesse: princeton at that time was supposed to be one of the
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navy's crowning achievements. it had two of the biggest cannons made at that time. to show off this ship, they are sailing it up and down the potomac and they are inviting members of congress and the president and the people aboard the ship to let them see this great creation of the u.s. armed forces. they are coming back down the potomac and they get near mount vernon. tyler is aboard the ship. his slave armistead is aboard the ship as well. they are going past mount vernon. they decide that to honor the nation's first president, they are going to fire the canon. tyler is below deck. a song is being sung that tyler wants to hear. they tell people that they are going to fire the canon and tyler wants to hear this song. armistead decides to go upstairs to see them fire the canon. unfortunately, the firing of the
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canon becomes a misfire and the canon actually explodes on board. tyler is spared because he is below deck. the people around the canon, most of them are immediately killed. because the canon actually exploded. so shrapnel is being shot across all of the upper decks. as you said, several members of the administration are killed during this accident. including armistead, the personal servant. story beyondhe that. when the hearses went back to the white house. jesse: this is an example of how they treated slaves during that
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time. the people are taken off of the boat. they are put in these beautiful hearses with caskets with cherry tops. armistead gets a pine box. and there is a scene described in the newspaper of all of the hearses had -- headed back to the capital and there's this and itx in the back veers off in another direction. he is sent home to his family in a pine box. everyone else who died was honored. once again, he gets a pine box. without fanfare. that is an example of how little the slaves were regarded coming even if you worked for the most powerful man in the united states. that shows how little they were regarded i the oaks in washington at the time. brian: you seem to be a positive person. a smile on your face.
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you are telling these stories. i want to show you a guy, that we have had here a couple of times, we haven't seen him in a while, who was so angry about what happened in this country. he talked about something that you wrote about. this is randall robinson. he has moved to st. kitts because of the anger he has over the way blacks were treated in this country. let's watch what he has to say about it. [video clip] >> you walk into the capital and you see all of this stuff describing the stages of america. nothing. no douglas. no tubman. no truth. nothing. but who built the capital? who cast the statue of freedom? slaves did. wiped it froms its memory. brian: how angry has this made you? jesse: there were times when i had to sit back and realize i
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had to deal with it and had to tell the story. that is the important part. that these stories are now being told. anyone who does not know their history is doomed to repeat it. by getting these slaves' names out into the public eye and having people read these stories, it is reclaiming a little bit of that respect we were talking about. armistead was sent off in a pine box. no one knows his name. no one cared about his name but maybe by writing the stories down and talking about them, we get a little bit of respect back for those men and women that was denied them during their life. brian: how much of the white house was built by slaves? jesse: the construction crew was
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primarily slaves. that is what they did. keep in mind, back then, washington was basically a swamp. there was no workforce here. the only major workforce in the washington area comes from the plantations in virginia and maryland. they went out and rented slaves. to build the white house, the capitol building, a lot of the buildings around here. james hogan, a slave owner from south carolina brought up some of his slaves to help build the white house. i mean, there is no way to sugarcoat it. this is how washington was built. this is how a lot of the important buildings in washington got built before the civil war. the slaves were easily accessible cheap labor. unlike free men, the slaves
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could not complain about their working conditions and they also were not getting money for their work. the slave owners did. they could not go anywhere because they could not afford to. when you look at the white house and the capital, a lot of the work was done, not all of it, but a lot of the manual labor that was done, a good portion of it was done by slaves. like i said, part of the reason for writing books like this is to make sure that these stories get told. a lot of times when we talk about history in washington, d.c. we talk about the founding fathers, the great politicians, the great city leaders but we don't talk about the people who make the city work. the first group of people who made this city work were slaves. a lot of us do not know their names. by writing a book like this, we begin to take back some of that dignity that was taking away from these slaves i people actually knowing who they were.
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brian: 10 of the first 12 presidents had slaves. those that did not, john adams and john quincy adams -- you dropped a nugget. when the white house was first constructed in 1800 there was no bathroom. jesse: the white house was not exactly the best place to live when it first opened. both john adams was not very happy to be in washington. he was happy to be president but when he moved into the white house, it was not exactly -- it was finished but not quite done. he could live in it.
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keep in mind, he did not have the slaves that everyone else had to finish the work on the white house. his wife called it -- a huge, drafty mansion. he bathed in the potomac. it is not exactly what we see now as the white house. brian: you talk about some kind of structure being built where i think slaves lived, right in the spot where andrew jackson's statue is across from the white house. jesse: when they were constructing the white house, the slaves had to live somewhere. they built shanties over around lafayette park. this was where the workmen lived. there were quite a few other buildings around the white house that are not there now. i would love to see a map where all of these were. there was an ice house. stables. shanties for slaves to live in
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while they were working on the white house. there were houses for freed men while they worked on the white house. they were all on the white house campus but they are all gone today. what the white house looks like today and what it looked like back then, that area is completely different. it would be great to see a map. brian: presidents hid the fact that they bought slaves. james polk bought 19 slaves in the white house. jesse: he came in and bought slaves while he was in the white house. he was one of the few people that decided that he did not -- that he needed the extra help while he was here in washington. he had slaves of his own back on the plantation in tennessee and he needed help while he was here in washington. he decided he was going to buy more and bring them and train them to work inside the white house. brian: what is the story of elias polk.
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he was a conservative that wanted to run for office. jesse: he was a faithful slave for james pulled. when he went back to tennessee, he becomes a political figure. he decides he wants to run for office as a conservative. even today, there are not as many conservatives in the african-american community running for office as there are liberals. elias polk was one of the first conservatives that ran for office as an african-american. it was not very popular in tennessee. a lot of people saw him standing on the side of the slaveowners and former slaveowners instead of being with the people. while he was a big person in
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politics back then, it does not seem like he was very popular among his own people or among the regular people. brian: if you were to give a gold star out to someone who had slaves that lived up to -- let -- what you would call a human -- letting them go eventually. who would get a gold star? jesse: i would have to give andrew jackson a gold star. not because he freed as many slaves as he should have but he actually was willing to put himself on the line for his slaves. he actually made sure that slaves like gracie that he bought here in washington, after he died, gracie and her husband were able to stay on the hermitage and become part of that community. jackson, time and time again stood up for the slaves who worked for him and the freed men who worked for him.
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even during the riot here in washington, d.c., there was an african-american freed man who worked for jackson in the white house. the mobs came for him. brian: those were after beverly snow. who was beverly snow? jesse: he owned an eating establishment here in washington, d.c. there is different talk about how that riot started. one discussion is that the riots began because of a drunk slave a took an ax and went after household and then it just snowballed from there. but what ended up happening was that a lot of the african-american establishment in washington and up being destroyed during this riot. a lot of african-americans in washington were killed. one of the people they went after worked for andrew jackson in the white house but jackson
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said no, you will not take him. brian: we are almost out of time. if you had to put your finger on one source of information that helped you the most in finding the stories, what would that be? jesse: the library of congress. stories like these are always found within the margins. very few of these slaves got to tell their own stories. to find their stories, you have to go back and read the owners' stories. yep to go back and read the owners of ledgers. you to go back and read the information. for me, the greatest repository of that information came from the library of congress. i don't want to give short shrift to any of the people that helped me at the presidential plantations. i was surprised at how willing they were to help me find this information. everyone i came across at the
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presidential plantations including mount vernon and the hermitage were all willing to open their records and let me look at them. the majority of my work took place at the library of congress. the best people in the world are librarians. they want you there. they want you there to work with them. they will give you whatever help in the world that you need. i can say this because my mom retired as a librarian. brian: the name of the book is "the invisibles: the untold story of african american slaves in the white house". our guest is ap reporter jesse holland junior. and we thank you very much. jesse: thank you. ♪
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>> for free transcripts or to give us your comments about this program, visit us at q&a.org. q&a programs are also available as a c-span podcast. [captioning performed by the national captioning institute, which is responsible for its caption content and accuracy. visit ncicap.org] >> if you enjoyed this week's q&a interview with jesse holland, here are some other programs you might like. thomas allen harris discusses his film, a look at how african-americans have been portrayed in photos. and another author talks about his book, "the caning, the assault that drove america to civil war." watch these any time or you can search the entirety of our library at c-span.org. >> next, live, your calls and
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comments on washington journal. noon eastern, jeb bush in nashua, new hampshire. p.m., we have donald trump in londonderry, new hampshire. [applause] >> every election cycle reminds us how important it is for citizens to be informed. >> i know a lot of c-span fans on the hill. my colleagues say, i saw you on c-span. >> this morning, director of suffolk university's research on the new hampshire polls and the role independence play in the primaries. then l boldin asaro talks about then, apports --
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donald trump supporter talks ♪ host: good morning. all eyes on the granite state this morning. we are one day away from the voters deciding who was their pick for the party nominations ahead of the first in the nation primary. the candidates and their supporters are crisscrossing the state. we begin with hillary clinton's event in new hampshire where madeleine albright, the first female secretary of state, was pressuring women to vote for hillary clinton. we want to get your take on it this morning. how important is it for
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