Selections from the Rare Book, Manuscript, and
Special Collections Library
WALT WHITMAN, FREE-SOIL JOURNALIST
Walt Whitman was not just the great American
poet and author of the groundbreaking Leaves of Grass; in the
years before the Civil War, he was also an accomplished journalist.
One of his early ventures was the Brooklyn Freeman, a newspaper
he founded in 1848 to express his opposition to the extension
of slavery. Whitman wrote for the Freeman, edited it, and possibly
even did the typesetting. The Trent Collection of Walt Whitman
includes a copy of the first issue of the Brooklyn Freeman, the
only extant copy of any issue of the newspaper.
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Brooklyn Freeman,
Volume 1, Number 1
September 9, 1848 |
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The son of liberal-minded parents, Whitman grew up supporting
working-class ideals. He left school at a young age but continued
to educate himself informally through visits to museums, libraries,
and theaters. During an 1848 trip to New Orleans, he witnessed
a slave auction, an experience many scholars say sparked his
fury against slavery. When Whitman returned to Brooklyn, he joined
forces with his friend Judge Samuel Johnson to found the Brooklyn
Freeman as a Free-Soil newspaper. The paper’s primary objective
was to raise support for political candidates who opposed slavery,
including presidential hopeful Martin Van Buren.
The first issue of the Freeman, which appeared on Saturday, September
9, 1848, priced at two cents, features excerpts from the writings
of Thomas Jefferson, as well as a reprint of Van Buren’s
letter accepting the nomination for president. Whitman himself
wrote all of the other articles, including “How things
have been managed in Kings County,” “Our enmity to
the south,” and “General Taylor’s Principles.”
Whitman intended to expand the paper to a daily edition, but
his plans were foiled by a fire that ravaged Brooklyn and destroyed
his office just one day after the first issue of the Freeman
was published. He was able to resume printing in November 1848
and presumably produced additional issues, though no copies are
known to have survived. In November 1849, feeling betrayed by
fellow Free-Soilers who joined forces with their former enemies,
the Hunkers, Whitman ceased publication.
The Brooklyn Freeman is just one of many noteworthy items in
the library’s Trent Collection of Walt Whitman, established
in 1942 and named in honor of the four daughters of its donors,
Mary Duke Biddle Trent Semans and her late first husband, physician
Josiah C. Trent. The bulk of the Trents’ private collection
had originally been gathered by Richard Maurice Bucke, Whitman’s
friend and literary executor. After 1942, Gay Wilson Allen supplemented
the library’s holdings with his own large collection of
Whitmaniana.
http://scriptorium.lib.duke.edu
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