Originally published at Just Orb. You can comment here or there.
“Well, you make it sound as though this is the first time we’ve had a black president.”
“Warren G. Harding was a negro.”
–John McLaughlin of The McLaughlin Group
I’ve never watched The McLaughlin Group, but I didn’t think John McLaughlin was some sort of crazy person. In fact, had someone told me they had heard John McLaughlin say these things, I would not have believed them. I saw it for myself while watching last night’s episode of The Colbert Report tonight during The ThreatDown.
Anyway, I was quite shocked to be informed that Harding was a negro … about as shocked as I was to even hear the word negro on TV. Even more shocking was that it was on a show, that even though I have never watched, I thought was a reasonable and thoughtful program, seeing as it has been on TV for 26 years. Strange, crank-like shows usually don’t last that long. Maybe there was more after the clipped they showed and he was just trying to be funny, but it didn’t seem that way. He seemed serious … and slightly insane or senile.
So, was Harding black?
During the campaign, rumors spread that Harding’s great-great-grandfather was a West Indian black and that other blacks might be found in his family tree. In response, Harding’s campaign manager said, “No family in the state (of Ohio) has a clearer, a more honorable record than the Hardings, a blue-eyed stock from New England and Pennsylvania, the finest pioneer blood.”The rumors, perhaps based on no more than local gossip, were circulated by William Estabrook Chancellor. Rumors may have been sustained by an alleged response of Harding to a friendly reporter, perhaps meant merely to be dismissive: “How do I know, Jim? One of my ancestors may have jumped the fence.” (Wallechinsky and Wallace, The People’s Almanac)
– Wikipedia
Most people seem to believe it was just a rumor meant to damage him during the election. In the 20’s, the One-drop Rule was very much in effect, and being considered “black” would most certainly have harmed his campaign for the presidency. All the same, it seems sort of outrageous that John McLaughlin would still be spreading rumors from the 1920’s as though they were fact.
It also seems silly to me that anyone ever thought about race the way people used to think about it. That having a great-great-grandfather from the Caribbean made you black? That’s just so crazy! But then … if the One-drop Rule was still in effect today, I’d be much, much more black than Warren G. Harding.
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Sticks and stones
Interesting that you find the word negro shocking, I'm 60 and it's is the word I grew up with. Black didn't come into political correctness until I was in my early 20's. Nigger was never used by anyone I knew and was never utter in in polite conversation, any more than Spic or Jap, although the latter was more common because of the servicemen from WWII who had served in the Pacific. I haven't heard it in years. Now nigger seems to be commonly used by black comedians, and yes, it still shocks me, so I guess it achieves the desired effect of offending people.
Anti-miscegenation laws have a long history in this country. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-misce
Re: Sticks and stones
And yes, black comedians and musicians that use nigger always make me shudder. It's a word with a lot of ugly history.
Considering that I grew up around and with a lot of really, really racist people, I am sometimes amazed I grasped so early on in life that people are people and didn't learn that particular trait from my elders. It's probably because the first school I went to was very mixed ethnically and I had friends of all colors (even though I wasn't really allowed to go to their houses and stuff -- which is sad). Or maybe because I got called kraut and kike one too many times as a kid and knew what it felt like to be made fun of for something you couldn't help.
As I have gotten older, it seems so fantastic sometimes how far things have come since I was born. Not letting people marry because of skin color? It sounds so crazy now, but it really wasn't that long ago they couldn't, and it was also not that long ago that interracial couples still were looked at funny. Maybe people will just finally get over it all sometime in my lifetime. I certainly hope so.
And thanks for adding me as a friend! Added you back!
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