His work set the tone for later black editors who would similarly address an array of topics and target a range of black and white audiences.12 In general, black newspapers needed an interracial readership for financial stability. Editors and contributors also understood that, through print, they might change the minds of those in the power structure who remained prejudiced as well as shape conversations and policy regarding African Americans. And people like Cornish reached a far broader audience than a list of subscribers indicates because of the ways ideas circulated in antebellum print culture.13
Cornish subtly attacked Russwurm throughout the Rights of All, including in a message encouraging black Americans to follow the example of Jewish people in London who petitioned Parliament for legal equality. “Americans we truly are, by birth and feeling,” Cornish wrote. He urged black people to assert more forcefully their desire for legal protections in the United States. He commanded his readers, “Let no man talk of impossibility; with God, all things are possible.”14 Many black activists expressed similar optimism rooted in their Christian faith. To Cornish, the pessimistic Russwurm did not belong in a community of black Christian men and women. Cornish’s criticism was indirect, but his target was clear. In August 1829, with Russwurm making final preparations to leave the country, Cornish wrote, “Any coloured man, of common intelligence, who gives his countenance and influence, to [Liberia] … should be considered as a traitor to his brethren, and discarded by every respectable man of colour.”15 Protesting the ACS and, by implication, Russwurm, he offered an alternative vision of black Americans’ future and laid the foundation for black citizenship politics.
Colonization was part of a broader project of restricting black people’s unfettered movement and access to space in the United States.16 Pennsylvania lawmakers proposed two measures in 1832, one that would limit protections available to alleged fugitive slaves and the other to outlaw new black migration into the commonwealth.17 Activists turned again to print culture for their response, collecting signatures on a petition against those measures.18 James Forten delivered their message to the state legislature. Born free in 1766, Forten ran a profitable sail-making shop in Philadelphia, had served on a privateer during the American Revolution, and had previously organized in opposition to an effort by lawmakers to outlaw new black migrants in the 1810s. In 1832, Forten and his fellow activists delivered their petition to state lawmakers and had it published, convinced that their concerns were meaningful beyond the population of free black Pennsylvanians.
Forten reminded lawmakers that their state constitution declared that all men were “born equally free and independent” and that, under its terms, “every man shall have a remedy by due course of law.”19 The petitioners denied that free black people endangered the state and vehemently rejected the prevailing argument that they had “promoted[ed] servile insurrections.”20 The petitioners might have chosen Forten as their representative because he had made a specific, memorable contribution to the nation by fighting in the Revolutionary War. His personal history reflected African Americans’ emotional ties to the nation, the less tangible but no less powerful feelings that bound people to their home. “They feel themselves to be citizens of Pennsylvania [and] children of the state,” Forten explained.21 The phrase conjured an image of activists throwing themselves on the mercy of the legislature, asking that the state reciprocate their feelings. But it also charged the state for dereliction of its duties. They made an emotional appeal designed to change the law, arguing for a citizen status that imposed responsibilities on individuals as well as on the government. From the petitioners’ perspective, it was no more just for Pennsylvania to reject James Forten than it was for a mother to abandon her infant. Citizenship should bind American people and governments in a web of obligations. Perhaps the strength of that appeal pushed lawmakers to reconsider. Perhaps logic moved legislators, convinced that it would not benefit their state to exclude people like Forten who had fought to create the nation. Pennsylvania officials rejected the proposed law to bar black migration into the state.22 But white northerners would continue to promote similar exclusionary measures that threatened black people’s claims to rights as citizens.
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Forten’s military service was part of a history that refuted the idea that African Americans had little to offer society as prospective citizens. Colonizationists and those who wanted to bar black people from particular states argued that African Americans were disproportionately poor, violent, and immoral. The personal histories of people like Forten helped refute those ideas. Activists argued that people who offered useful contributions to their communities were entitled to citizen status. In 1832, the Pennsylvania petitioners presented data that denied charges of black poverty, including evidence that African Americans were only 4 percent of the 549 people who had received poor relief from the state in 1830, far less than their 8 percent of the state’s population. Forten estimated that African Americans paid more than enough in taxes to support poor black Pennsylvanians, and he noted that many black people turned to African American benevolent societies for relief rather than seeking state aid. The petitioners said black Pennsylvanians owned more than $100,000 in real property and that many worked in skilled mechanical trades despite prejudice that limited their opportunities for apprenticeships.23 Black self-sufficiency was a foundation for claims to legal protections.
Because African Americans were valuable members in their communities, black removal would harm people across the nation. Samuel Cornish built the Rights of All around the argument that African Americans were important, enthusiastic contributors to the United States. In July 1829, when government officials gathered to amend New York City’s charter, Cornish encouraged them to provide equal employment opportunity in the city. “The pursuit of an honest living,” he hoped, “will be secured to all our citizens.” He printed an editorial the morning the officials planned to meet in which he emphasized black people’s desire to work in specific jobs for their own benefit and to help their city develop. “Our colored citizens have uniformly been denied License as Car[t]men and porters,” Cornish wrote. As he sat at his desk drafting that editorial, Cornish must have imagined lawmakers traveling through lower Manhattan on their way to the meeting: perhaps some would pick up an unfamiliar newspaper or overhear a discussion about the opinionated black editor and be convinced that black people were essential workers for the city. Cornish wanted people to reexamine their ideas about black Americans and about citizenship as a legal status. It was likely no coincidence that he published this message just as the New York Workingmen’s Party emerged in the city, a group of white laborers who organized to secure political and economic power. He wanted to capitalize on extant discussions about the relationship between work and formal political rights.24 He outlined a capacious citizenship that would have appealed to many readers, one defined by individuals’ contributions to their communities. He sought job opportunities for black Americans in ways that aligned with his political goals.25
New York in the 1820s was a city on the move, where cartmen and porters performed critical tasks. They transported lumber, sand, and